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Promise Land Tannery
Est. 2006
Pre-Tannery Hide Care
Shipping Raw Skulls and
Skeletons: A photo Tutorial
-Your Goal is to keep the Skulls
from leaking and frozen until arrival.
Freezing Skulls
Photo Tutorial coming soon.
Boxing and Shipping: A Large
Specimen (Deer, Buffalo, Longhorn, Etc)
Small Specimens are shipped in the same manner.
Step 1: Ensure your specimen
is totally frozen. Remove any frost build up.

Step 2- Bag the skull, Reinforce
all sharp points and edges with duct tape. Especially the nose and
horn tips, Eye Sockets and Nasals, and the jaw line on bottom side.


Step 3: Cover the first bag in absorbent
newsprint, this will help contain any leaks. Several layers
is best.

Step 4- Add a second trash bag. The
Heavy duty contractor bags work best for these big skulls.
Tape the bag so it is form fitting.

Step 5: Choose a box that is 2" or a little
more bigger than your item. If it is much bigger than this there
will be too much movement within the box and your box might be too
weak and get crushed in handling. This can cause major damage or
leakage, causing your box and specimen to be discarded. Line
the sides and bottom with R11 Fiberglass bat house insulation. Craft
paper backed works best.

Step 6: Line the box with a third heavy duty trash
bag.

Step 7: Line the bottom of the bag with some
packing materials (like Peanuts, Crumpled newsprint, etc) and add
your specimen. If your specimen is antlered or has very sharp horns
add several layers of cardboard or thin plywood to the bottom/sides
of the box between the insulation and box. This will help stop
things from poking thru the box.

Step 8: Pack More packing
materials around the skull, filling any voids. If there are large
voids, like between the antlers on a deer, you can tape a smaller
empty box closed and fit this between the antlers. This will add
strength but not weight to your box and reduce the risk that it will
be crushed. Large pieces of Styrofoam also work well for this.

Step 9- Tape the outside bag
closed.

Step 10: Add your final layer of insulation.

Step 11- Secure top of box with a few pieces
of tape, just to hold things in place.

Step 12: Add rings of fiberglass strapping
tape to reinforce areas subject to high stress. Usually a strip 3-7"
in from each edge is sufficient, and another in the center of
the box if it is very large or very long. This will help stop the
box from splitting or coming open.

Step 13: Finish taping all edges and seams.
Mark as "taxidermy items" and store frozen until ready to ship.

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