Leather Tannery Recommendations
There
are any number of reliable leather tanning companies here in the U.S.
as well as in many foreign countries. You may want to work with your
favorite tanning company or taxidermist to have your hides tanned. If
you do not, we can recommend a few tanning companies with whom we have
experience.
Jerry
Bogart, owner of Specialty Leather has performed flawlessly for Walden
& Bork and its customers. We highly recommend them. (See their hide
& skin preparation guidelines on this page.) Your salted fleshed
skins can be shipped back with your trophies and then forwarded on to
Specialty Leather. Specialty Leather does a superb job handling your
order quickly and efficiently. They can even match colors - such as
cranberry or pink. A rare find!
United States:
Specialty Leather Processors, Inc.
Contact: Jerry Bogart
2135 Industrial Park Rd.
Boone, IA 50036
E-Mail: info@specialtyleather.com
Phone: 515-433-0176
Website: www.specialtyleather.com
Alligator & Crocodile Tanning
For
alligator and crocodile tanning, there is none better than American
Tanning & Leather from Griffin, GA. Our contact at AmTan is
Christy Redd. AmTan details their skinning instructions,hide care,
handling and shipping of alligator and crocodile hides on their web
site. Please read these instructions under “Contract Tanning
Instructions” at www.amtan.com. Also, print off the “Hide Care
Tips” before you go gator hunting. If you have questions call
Christy direct. AmTan has supplied some of the finest customer-owned,
hunter-harvested alligator leather we have every seen, perfect in
every way. AmTan offers several different finishes. Our
favorite is their glazed. Very showy! A word of
warning: we have seen some badly mutilated hides due to poor
skinning techniques. Take your time, or urge your guide to take
his time skinning your gator. Many gators are taken at night and
skinned under less than ideal conditions, including low light, beat up,
worn out hunters and sometimes a bit too much celebratory “adult
beverage.” (I’ve seen it happen!). Take your time and do it
right because the end result will be well worth it.
Alligator & Crocodile Skin Preparation for Tanning - Click to Read
American Tanning & Leather
Contact: Katie Taylor
730 Pimento Avenue, Building A
Griffin, GA 30224
Email: katietaylor@amtan.com
Phone: 770-228-4433 ext. 201
Website: www.amtan.com
Packaging and Shipping Instructions
• Make sure that your skin(s) have been fleshed and salted according to the Skinning/Fleshing Instructions.
• If your skin(s) have been frozen, make sure that the skin(s)
have been thawed completely and resalted. DO NOT SHIP FROZEN SKINS!
• Roll your skin(s) tightly by starting at the head and rolling to
the tail. The outside of the skin should be on the outside as you roll
the skin.
• For your reference write down the tag number of each skin you are
sending. This tag number is needed for the paperwork you are sending us.
An example of how the tag should be listed is by State/Year/Tag #
(Example: TX 10 123)
• We can ONLY accept skins that have the CITES tag attached to the skin. Each skin MUST have its
own CITES tag attached to it. You have to contact your local game
and fish authorities for instructions and shipping permission. We will
have to return skins, at the owner’s expense, that are sent in without
the CITES tag attached.
• Do NOT send any other pieces of the alligator with your skin.
There is not a CITES tag attached to them, so we have no way of knowing
what belongs to which customer.
• Place each skin in a sturdy plastic bag that will collect any
drainage. A heavy duty trash bag is ideal for this step.
• Line a sturdy shipping container with newspaper and put the wrapped skin(s) inside.
• Put your Customer Information Sheet, Contract Tanning Skin
Detail Sheet (with your tag numbers listed), and check or money order
(if applicable) in a Ziploc bag on top. This is to keep the paper work
from getting wet and/or damaged.
• Close and seal the box securely.
• Ship your skin via FedEx, UPS, or a Freight Trucking Service.
You may also deliver your skin(s) by appointment, M-F / 8 AM-12 PM
& 1 PM-5 PM. We are not open on Saturday or Sunday. Please do NOT
ship skins via the U.S. Postal Service.
Hide & Skin Preparation & Guidelines
Hides
and skins from successful safari hunts must be treated with great care
to insure their value in taxidermy mounts and in the making of leather.
Once the animal has been killed, deterioration of the hide begins
immediatley. There are skinners of safari animals who have great skill,
and can remove the skins in the field with minimum damage. This is
important in removing the skin from the entire animal.
Quality of hide care and cure are important equally for taxidermy
work and for the tanner making leather for leather products. Stress
quality, carefull skinning to your PH. Skin the entire animal, down to
the hooves. The skins need to be removed with the minimum of fat and
meat, insuring that blood and body fluids do not migrate into the hair.
The hides should be cooled in salt brine or cold water, washing off
blood and body fluids from the skin on both sides. The skin should then
be salted on the flesh side with a very fine crystal salt, and allowed
to drain. If they must be folded for transport, they should later be
laid open on a bed of salt and re-salted, thereafter allowing the skin
to drain. Once draining has stopped, the skin can be folded and prepared
for shipment to the taxidermy or tannery.
Ostrich skins are especially difficult as the heavy layer of fat
prevents the salt from reaching the skin and preserving it. The solution
is not to flesh the skin too cleanly, but only scrape the heavy fat
away from the skin, leaving the membrane intact behind the crown
(central quill area). Fleshing too deeply results in holes behind each
quill, especially if the feathers are not pulled. For leather making,
pulling the feathers immediately after the ostrich is killed is ideal as
the quills will swell and become round and proud. If conservative
fleshing is done thereafter, and the skin is salted and laid on a bed of
salt to drain, the resulting leather will be superior. Every short cut
will compromise subsequent leather quality.
Further information is available at specialtyleather.com or through email at specialtyleather@qwest.net.
Hair-On Tanning Suggestion
If
you request hair on tanning of your hides or backskins, proper trophy
care and salting procedures must be followed precisely. Many a mount and
backskin has been destroyed or otherwise compromised by improper skin
preparation. Your backskins must be cared for with the same respect as
that given to your trophy mounts...otherwise, hair-slip is a distinct
possibilty. It is recommended that hair-on skins be salted and dried
immediately and then delivered to your designated tanning company as
soon as possible. Request that your skins be stored in a cool
environment to maintain their integrity.
If you can rely on your African or other overseas crew to properly
care for the hides that you wish to be tanned in the U.S. with hair-on,
it is advisable to have those preserved hides shipped to your U.S.
taxidermist along with your trophies and then request that the leather
be tanned by a leather quality tannery here in the US such as Specialty
Leather. (Specialty Leather does not do taxidermy, tanning or fur
dressing). Once again...quality of hair-on skins depends heavily upon
immediate in-field care of your skins by your professional hunter's
crew.
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Importing Your Trophies and Game Skins:
Trophy And Hide Shipping & Custom Brokerage
HuntingTrophy.com (www.huntingtrophy.com),
a division of Coppersmith Global Logistics, is one of the most
respected custom brokers in the U.S., licensed by U.S. Customs and
Border Protection. HuntingTrophy.com assists hundreds of hunters every
year, clearing their foreign hunting trophies through U.S. Customs, U.S.
Fish & Wildlife and the Department of Agriculture... then
expediting trophies to the hunter's taxidermist. They are experts in the
complex laws involved in importing trophies into the U.S. and provide a
semaless import and final delivery experience. HuntingTrophy.com
handles all communications with taxidermists, shipping agents, provides
shipment tracking and handles all of the required importing paperwork
for the hunter. If you are planning your first international hunting
adventure, go to HuntingTrophy.com as they provide a wealth of useful
information and planning advice. Coppersmith Global Logistics has been
in business for 66 years and have offices in Los Angeles, San Francisco,
Chicago, New York, Atlanta, Seattle and Portland. Additionally,
Coppersmith (HuntingTrophy.com), is a member of the World Cargo Alliance
and has a global network of knowledgeable and reliable agents who make
certain your trophies are cleared at customs and forwarded to your
taxidermist. To get the ball rolling, call 404-366-1650.