Your step-by-step guide from deer hide to buckskin is a masterful demonstration of traditional craftsmanship and skill. Sharing such a detailed and methodical process highlights your dedication to preserving and passing on valuable techniques. Your effort in showcasing each stage not only educates but also celebrates the art of transforming raw materials into beautifully finished products. And I am Floating Village Life.
What he is doing is honestly being a lost art form! I’ve been hunting and working with animal hides my whole life! It’s a very time consuming process but you learn so much more then you would thank possible! Great work my friend!
As the graduate of one buckskin making workshop, I’m no expert, however some things to note: Soaking the hide in a bucking solution to loosen the hair makes the initial hair removal a breeze. Don’t need to stretch/dry the hide, a sharp scraper, and don’t have to work very hard. Scraping the inner hide thoroughly when wet is important. Avoids the crunchy shit he was pulling off after drying. Smoking should only take about 20 minutes/side, not 8 hours? Things I’m going to try when I tan next (soon! I just brought home an elk and a whitetail) include using a pressure washer in the scraping process. Some vids online, and it looks promising. Last thing: I think there’s a better time to sew the holes closed. Can’t remember, but maybe before final working/drying?! Anyone know? Great video. Thanks very much for the content, Clay. Inspiring me to get tanning my hides! Do you have one on bark tanning, or making leather?
When I was younger and had lots of time I did a lot of brain tanning and this video brings back those memories. I can hardly wait to retire in a few more years and get back into it. The hardest part of this process is getting full penetration of the brain (or egg yolk) mixture. Definitely start out with something thin like whitetail deer hides and then advance to mule deer and elk. It's hard work but extremely rewarding.
Clay, can't tell you how much I appreciate your videos. I pray that in my retired life (a few years) I'll make the time to learn and do the craft time you share on your channel. Thanks for all you do.
All about the sound of those poles at the start Love a good pole noise, it's how you know you've got a good one. Which is also a promising stage in a bow build
Awesome skill to possess! Thanks for sharing! That’s an unbelievable amount of effort for a pair of pants! It puts in perspective how spoiled we are today, but maybe not tomorrow.
Incredible. It's sad to realise that these skills, developed over thousands of years, have been bred out of us, but inspiring to know people like you exist to keep them alive.
I’m going on vacation after watching that! I’m exhausted! Good grief, had no idea that turning a hide into something usable took that much work. I’ve skinned deer and elk before but never used the hide. Amazing and thanks Clay!
Great Video! A couple of well placed pointy sticks inside the sack while smoking improve flow of smoke and prevent the hides from touching each other which would cause spots that are not well smoked.
Very few people in this life can say they have tanned a deer hide like that. Thank you Clay for teaching us all! I used to rub wood ash on the hide and bury it for a week when I dug it up the hair would fall right off. Never learned the last steps. Now I know. Thank you!
This is almost certainly something I'll never do but fascinating to watch nonetheless. It's so wonderful people like yourself are making videos like these because otherwise this type of knowledge could be lost forever in the modern world. Visiting Idaho tomorrow for the first time!
This is awesome! I just did this with my daughter’s first deer with her bow. I made two sets of finger tabs with it. And plan on making a knife sheath.
This is one of the best videos I've seen. I have tried to tan leather before using "a" buckskin method (because there are many) and it hasn't turned out. Next time I am going to try it your way :)
It was so easy to immerse myself in what you were doing/teaching. Thank you for sharing you wealth of information and as another person mentioned, a great surprise ending showing off your workmanship like that. I have subscribed, your content is very appreciated.
Love it! Done quite a few wet scrapes and still managed to learn something! Love the pants ive got to make a pair forsure i hear they are strongest fabric there is. Punky golden pine gives a gorgeous color but its cool to know you can use something as easy as straw.
Every video you post is just a real delight, thank you Clay ! Your feather sticks are looking better than ever, you can't say that you're bad at it anymore 😝 Keep up the great work and stay safe :)
Fantastic video man. I like the end a lot when you just flip the skin and end with pants. Great editing. The pants look really good. My paternal grandmother was a seamstress and I spent a lot of time as a kid watching her work. I know good pants when I see one. And I see the fast die last t-shirt from last video made an appearance again.
Another great video Clay. I always have tanned hides in the winter. Start softening on the frame and end up by the wood stove over a stake cause we get about 5 minutes of sun 2 or 3 times a month here in northern ny in the winter. Think I'm gonna start fleshing them and throw em in the freezer till spring.
Thank you 🙏🏼 Clay, that was a phenomenal amount of work and the reward was equally impressive. I envy your knowledge and I wish I lived out west to live a similar lifestyle 💪🏼👊🏼
Dude this is simply amazing awesome skills man. This is art at its finest. Hats off to you man.. this is a lost art. I really want to try this. I know I will probably mess up some things but I really need to try this
I know they are young and I’m sure you aren’t interested in having them on the internet but I’d be awesome if your sons had a channel on UA-cam kids for my children to watch. We limit what and when my kids can watch UA-cam but I’d be more than happy for them to see kids their age doing what they probably think is impossible for kids in the concrete jungle of the big city. Love your content man, hopefully one day my kids will enjoy your kids content and it’ll inspire them to get outside and learn. God bless.
I know his wife and son do have youtube channels! His son is Fen Hayes, haven't watched his videos personally, but looks like he is walking in his dads steps with the outdoors content!
@@BozhidarS Awesome. I figured his sons would follow in his steps. Kind of hard not to with a dad like that. The outdoor stuff is what I’d like to see my kids watch. If they’re going to melt their brains with UA-cam, I’d be happy to see them watch kids their age go out and get their hands dirty. I do my best to get them out in nature fishing and hunting but wife and I are city stuck with typical jobs. I hate UA-cam kids, Itd be a relief for his youngins to make content similar to his but to relate to the youth. The world and internet could use more of that. I’ll introduce my kids to their channel tonight. Thankyou
@@clayhayeshunter I hope your winnings on Alone made that possible, you deserve everything you have and more. I watched your bow videos and found out you were on Alone, we binge watched every season. How a skinny ultra-fit guy like you made it to the end is a testament to skill and perseverance. Thanks so much for sharing your knowledge.
I've got last year's deer hide scrapped and salted. I also saved the brains. Thanks for the motivation to take the next step. My neighbors are going to wonder what the hell I'm smoking now, lol.
This is/was enjoyable to watch, and a intensive labour of love to get a wonderful result. Yet, not like you would easily find fresh deer hide in the city, though there are a lot of fat does and bucks. 🤔Wait those are humans. 😮😅
I made a tanned dear hide as a kid. I tacked it out on a piece of plywood, covered it with salt, then after a few days, i scraped the fat off if it. I did this twice. Then i soaked it in a hollowed out oak tree stump that was in our front yard. I filled the stump with water, oak leaves, and salt, then i keft it there all winter. I used a sharp Bowie knife and scraoed all the hair off of it. This made some pretty decent hide, but i didnt do much with it.
My family is moving from California to Arkansas, and plan on building a place big enough for all of us, and as self-sustaining as possible. Your videos are going to be a major cornerstone of learning. Thank you so much for the immense amount of effort. You rock.
Mesmerizing. I had to grin at the ending when you shook from hide to pants to wearing - great videography! Bet those pants will last you ages. And the hide looked beautiful, unique. What is the hide’s odor like? Thank you for this tutorial. Well done.
Oh wowwww ! Thank you for this amazing video. Let the fun begin - my first to try this out. Hunters left some amazing hides and I had no idea where to start. I have a Gold Wildebeest, a normal Wildebeest, and two black Impala hides. And 3 scrote totes 😅. I will improvise on tools as I go. I want to keep the hair though. Do I need to smoke it too ?
A realy realy good teaching video!!! I see many work steps that have to be done continuously. Are there areas of the steps where you can just leave the skin there for now without working on it any further and carry on later?
lol I sat quietly and intently watching the process unfold step by step then in a blink of an eye you're dancing around in buck skin britches and busting out laughing 😂 informative entertaining and fun, Keep up the great content 👊
I used my washer to clean my hides before tanning them, and, after tanning, double bagged them in garbage bags full of clean sawdust and put them in the dryer on air dry to keep them moving while drying. The drying technigue worked perfectly, and I recommend it. Cleaning hides with a washer cost me the washer and a wife. Too cheap to go to the laundry mat.
Your step-by-step guide from deer hide to buckskin is a masterful demonstration of traditional craftsmanship and skill. Sharing such a detailed and methodical process highlights your dedication to preserving and passing on valuable techniques. Your effort in showcasing each stage not only educates but also celebrates the art of transforming raw materials into beautifully finished products. And I am Floating Village Life.
Thank you very much!
Love it
This was a very articulate and kind response. Love this.
What tools do you use
Nice work Mr.Hayes. No music background, no talk...... A good, straight-forward video.
Glad you liked it
damn haha making the jeans at the end really blew me away. they look like a pair of commercial pants. really good video, great info.
Many thanks
The way you showcase nature’s tranquility is impressive. This video is so soothing. Does anyone else feel the same?
This is probably the best step by step no bs instruction I’ve ever watched on UA-cam. Thank you sir
What he is doing is honestly being a lost art form! I’ve been hunting and working with animal hides my whole life! It’s a very time consuming process but you learn so much more then you would thank possible! Great work my friend!
I’ve watched a lot of tutorials. Yours is the clearest I’ve seen. Thank you.
My native language is not English so when I find videos like this that don't have any narration during the process I am very grateful❤
All videos lack narration if you turn down the volume
As the graduate of one buckskin making workshop, I’m no expert, however some things to note:
Soaking the hide in a bucking solution to loosen the hair makes the initial hair removal a breeze. Don’t need to stretch/dry the hide, a sharp scraper, and don’t have to work very hard.
Scraping the inner hide thoroughly when wet is important. Avoids the crunchy shit he was pulling off after drying.
Smoking should only take about 20 minutes/side, not 8 hours?
Things I’m going to try when I tan next (soon! I just brought home an elk and a whitetail) include using a pressure washer in the scraping process. Some vids online, and it looks promising.
Last thing: I think there’s a better time to sew the holes closed. Can’t remember, but maybe before final working/drying?! Anyone know?
Great video. Thanks very much for the content, Clay. Inspiring me to get tanning my hides!
Do you have one on bark tanning, or making leather?
When I was younger and had lots of time I did a lot of brain tanning and this video brings back those memories. I can hardly wait to retire in a few more years and get back into it. The hardest part of this process is getting full penetration of the brain (or egg yolk) mixture. Definitely start out with something thin like whitetail deer hides and then advance to mule deer and elk. It's hard work but extremely rewarding.
Clay, can't tell you how much I appreciate your videos. I pray that in my retired life (a few years) I'll make the time to learn and do the craft time you share on your channel. Thanks for all you do.
Thanks 😊
Sense watching you on ALONE you have become such a great mentor to me. I can’t thank you enough. Cheers from a Canadian hunter/bushmen 🍻🇨🇦👊🏻
what an amazing overview of the process shot artistically and perfectly narrated by the closed captions.
All about the sound of those poles at the start
Love a good pole noise, it's how you know you've got a good one.
Which is also a promising stage in a bow build
Awesome skill to possess! Thanks for sharing! That’s an unbelievable amount of effort for a pair of pants! It puts in perspective how spoiled we are today, but maybe not tomorrow.
But maybe not tomorrow! Reminds me of the Einstein quote about the fourth world war being fought with sticks and stones…
Best SHTF/Homesteading/Survival site on YT. Great stuff Clay!
Wow, thanks!
you are one of the great teachers of the native ways. fine tutorial. bad ass artistry
Incredible. It's sad to realise that these skills, developed over thousands of years, have been bred out of us, but inspiring to know people like you exist to keep them alive.
Country ppl know this kind of stuff but we keep getting pushed out of our towns by overpopulation and pricing
We teach people who don’t assume we are ignorant and don’t make fun of how we talk
Tyson chicken factories are stinking up the land near us and buying all land available. There are 4 in a 10 mile radius or less
This lowers our property value for them to buy, how convenient for big corporations. Support local businesses!
I had no idea how much time it took, and the amount of work involved just to get to the point of actually being able to work with it WOW. Great video!
And the smell of smoked hide is beyond description!!!! This is on my bucket list.
I’m going on vacation after watching that! I’m exhausted! Good grief, had no idea that turning a hide into something usable took that much work. I’ve skinned deer and elk before but never used the hide. Amazing and thanks Clay!
Give it a try!
I've done raw hide and tanned hides using very similar process, your hide came out perfect.
That was an incredible amount of effort. Wow.
This is one of the coolest videos I have ever seen. You just made pants from an animal part. I may try this when i finally take my first deer.
There is a reason they called it, "Working a hide." Thanks for the video.
Great Video! A couple of well placed pointy sticks inside the sack while smoking improve flow of smoke and prevent the hides from touching each other which would cause spots that are not well smoked.
Very few people in this life can say they have tanned a deer hide like that. Thank you Clay for teaching us all! I used to rub wood ash on the hide and bury it for a week when I dug it up the hair would fall right off. Never learned the last steps. Now I know. Thank you!
This felt very much like a primitive technology video. Really well done!
Thanks
This is almost certainly something I'll never do but fascinating to watch nonetheless. It's so wonderful people like yourself are making videos like these because otherwise this type of knowledge could be lost forever in the modern world. Visiting Idaho tomorrow for the first time!
Awesome, have fun
Thank you for such wonderful teaching, Mr. Hayes!
You are very welcome
Very well done, my friend.
Reminds me of the thorough explanations of projects found in the Foxfire series I read as a teenager, in the 80's..
Great books
The amount of work that goes into making this is incredible.
Brain tanning is the best.....Gives the hide a Really long life.... Indian method of tanning....Clay surely knows...!!! Great Vid....👍👍👍👍👍👍
I agree
Funny I was just curious on how to make buck skin now I know every step to do it keep it up these are very educational! 😁
Glad I could help!
Sharing such a detailed and methodical process highlights your dedication to preserving and passing on valuable techniques.
This is awesome! I just did this with my daughter’s first deer with her bow. I made two sets of finger tabs with it. And plan on making a knife sheath.
Awesome!
I live in a town in the UK, have a job (welder) I'll probably never have to do this but find your videos absolutely fascinating 💥🥊💞
Glad you enjoyed it
This is one of the best videos I've seen. I have tried to tan leather before using "a" buckskin method (because there are many) and it hasn't turned out. Next time I am going to try it your way :)
Loved it and learned a lot ! Thank you!
You are an amazing Human! Truly. Thanks for sharing all the incredible things you accomplish ❤
Wow, thank you!
It was so easy to immerse myself in what you were doing/teaching. Thank you for sharing you wealth of information and as another person mentioned, a great surprise ending showing off your workmanship like that. I have subscribed, your content is very appreciated.
That was great! But your ''vine water purifier'' is still at the top of my list...!
Love it! Done quite a few wet scrapes and still managed to learn something! Love the pants ive got to make a pair forsure i hear they are strongest fabric there is. Punky golden pine gives a gorgeous color but its cool to know you can use something as easy as straw.
Great video & I've already learned a better way to wring. Thank you.
Every video you post is just a real delight, thank you Clay !
Your feather sticks are looking better than ever, you can't say that you're bad at it anymore 😝
Keep up the great work and stay safe :)
Thank you very much!
Never seen this process before, or heard about it. Great stuff! Will have to try it on deerskin here over the pond.
Great video. Thanks for taking the time to make it.
Amazing video, just imagine how many generation passed until they mastered the process.
I don’t have the patience to do this . I did enjoy watching you do it though! Great job.
I've always wanted to know how to do this... thank you for creating this!
Fantastic video, Clay! Some of the best content on UA-cam for sure.
Glad you think so!
Fantastic video man. I like the end a lot when you just flip the skin and end with pants. Great editing. The pants look really good. My paternal grandmother was a seamstress and I spent a lot of time as a kid watching her work. I know good pants when I see one. And I see the fast die last t-shirt from last video made an appearance again.
Thank ya
cant wait to see you make the pants! great content as always Clay
Awesome Clay, you amaze me every time I watch I learn something new, thank you for sharing
Glad you enjoyed it
Another great video Clay. I always have tanned hides in the winter. Start softening on the frame and end up by the wood stove over a stake cause we get about 5 minutes of sun 2 or 3 times a month here in northern ny in the winter. Think I'm gonna start fleshing them and throw em in the freezer till spring.
Amazing work you made it very easy to learn keep up the great videos
What a great lesson and a very well made video I loved it.
Great tutorial video! Now i need to get a deer!
Great instructional video. My kids love it.
Great to hear!
Thank you 🙏🏼 Clay, that was a phenomenal amount of work and the reward was equally impressive. I envy your knowledge and I wish I lived out west to live a similar lifestyle 💪🏼👊🏼
Glad you enjoyed it!
Wonderful produced video , glad your providing this type of content.
Glad you enjoy it!
Dude this is simply amazing awesome skills man. This is art at its finest. Hats off to you man.. this is a lost art. I really want to try this. I know I will probably mess up some things but I really need to try this
It takes a lot of work to make a leather, but the results are amazing.
16:42 oooo perfect. I was thinking about where I could get scraps for glue. This part gave me a good answer.
I didn’t know this part. I just didn’t think about it.
Thanks for the tutorial very useful.
I know they are young and I’m sure you aren’t interested in having them on the internet but I’d be awesome if your sons had a channel on UA-cam kids for my children to watch. We limit what and when my kids can watch UA-cam but I’d be more than happy for them to see kids their age doing what they probably think is impossible for kids in the concrete jungle of the big city. Love your content man, hopefully one day my kids will enjoy your kids content and it’ll inspire them to get outside and learn. God bless.
I know his wife and son do have youtube channels! His son is Fen Hayes, haven't watched his videos personally, but looks like he is walking in his dads steps with the outdoors content!
@@BozhidarS Awesome. I figured his sons would follow in his steps. Kind of hard not to with a dad like that. The outdoor stuff is what I’d like to see my kids watch. If they’re going to melt their brains with UA-cam, I’d be happy to see them watch kids their age go out and get their hands dirty. I do my best to get them out in nature fishing and hunting but wife and I are city stuck with typical jobs. I hate UA-cam kids, Itd be a relief for his youngins to make content similar to his but to relate to the youth. The world and internet could use more of that. I’ll introduce my kids to their channel tonight. Thankyou
Yep, both boys have channels. Fen’s is mostly outdoor stuff. Coye’s is focused on sailing.
@@clayhayeshunter I hope your winnings on Alone made that possible, you deserve everything you have and more. I watched your bow videos and found out you were on Alone, we binge watched every season. How a skinny ultra-fit guy like you made it to the end is a testament to skill and perseverance. Thanks so much for sharing your knowledge.
The wiggle at the end! Brilliant video. Thank you. My dear dad used to tan deer.
Thank you for a huge learning video , great great great
Ho Clay, that's great people pay a lot of money for pants like you make. Thanks for showing me I love it.
I love this Chanel and its videos
😊
Seriously, what a wonderful video.
Great tuto, very nice to watch and what a quick pants sewing in the end ! 😂 I hope to see a video on that project as well one day 😉👍🏼
Thank you! 😊
I've got last year's deer hide scrapped and salted. I also saved the brains. Thanks for the motivation to take the next step. My neighbors are going to wonder what the hell I'm smoking now, lol.
🤣have fun
Always wondered how that was done. Fascinating...
That was an oddly satisfying video. Thanks for video and sharing the knowledge.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Very interesting i enjoyed watching. Thank you for sharing your experience and talent.
This is/was enjoyable to watch, and a intensive labour of love to get a wonderful result. Yet, not like you would easily find fresh deer hide in the city, though there are a lot of fat does and bucks. 🤔Wait those are humans. 😮😅
😂
Nice work Clay - as usual.
I made a tanned dear hide as a kid. I tacked it out on a piece of plywood, covered it with salt, then after a few days, i scraped the fat off if it. I did this twice. Then i soaked it in a hollowed out oak tree stump that was in our front yard. I filled the stump with water, oak leaves, and salt, then i keft it there all winter. I used a sharp Bowie knife and scraoed all the hair off of it. This made some pretty decent hide, but i didnt do much with it.
That takes some skills!! Good stuff.
Thanks 👍
My family is moving from California to Arkansas, and plan on building a place big enough for all of us, and as self-sustaining as possible. Your videos are going to be a major cornerstone of learning. Thank you so much for the immense amount of effort. You rock.
That is awesome!
Mesmerizing. I had to grin at the ending when you shook from hide to pants to wearing - great videography! Bet those pants will last you ages. And the hide looked beautiful, unique. What is the hide’s odor like? Thank you for this tutorial. Well done.
I wish I knew someone that lived near me in Vermont that had land and did this stuff. I wanna learn a lot before I get my own land
Thank You very much for showing us.
You bet!
Great video, thanks for sharing your process brother
I’ve never seen someone dry scrape the fur off, only wet bucking! I will have to try this!
That Draw Knife Working Good you know that hide worth more with fur on it right Making Some Money Back Wow Nice Work man 😎👍💯🇺🇲🔥🏹
Oh wowwww ! Thank you for this amazing video. Let the fun begin - my first to try this out. Hunters left some amazing hides and I had no idea where to start.
I have a Gold Wildebeest, a normal Wildebeest, and two black Impala hides. And 3 scrote totes 😅.
I will improvise on tools as I go.
I want to keep the hair though.
Do I need to smoke it too ?
A realy realy good teaching video!!!
I see many work steps that have to be done continuously. Are there areas of the steps where you can just leave the skin there for now without working on it any further and carry on later?
I've always loved your content, Clay. Sweet pants
Good job you got this man.
Amazing! I had no idea.
Nice finish.
Cool video! When you were wringing out the hide with the wood it reminded me of the jail scene from Shanghai Noon 😂
You had fun making that ending lol
lol I sat quietly and intently watching the process unfold step by step then in a blink of an eye you're dancing around in buck skin britches and busting out laughing 😂 informative entertaining and fun, Keep up the great content 👊
Thank ya
Nice pants man! Epic process.
Love the ending mate 😆 awesome set of pants.
Wow great job
I used my washer to clean my hides before tanning them, and, after tanning, double bagged them in garbage bags full of clean sawdust and put them in the dryer on air dry to keep them moving while drying. The drying technigue worked perfectly, and I recommend it. Cleaning hides with a washer cost me the washer and a wife. Too cheap to go to the laundry mat.