I've heard that boiling kills the bacteria that makes maceration work, but I'm no expert.......My last ones pulled off after about an hour of boiling if I remember right. Could you boil it until they pull off first?
You could use a crock pot if you want to really speed up the maceration.Anyone know of a decent cheap souvide machine?
Not sure what a sous vide machine cost but I'm doing a deer skull right now using a fish tank heater and a 5 gallon bucket.Anyone know of a decent cheap souvide machine?
Will a 5 gallon bucket work for a sous vide container? Don't know how hot these things get and don't want to melt something.Had an interesting learning experience this year. Did the black bag trick to get the sheaths to pop off. But, I didn’t have the time to sous vide then skull so just left it in the bag for a month. This was unskinned, lower jaw on, no prep work done beside pulling sheaths. It stunk bad for a few weeks but then the smell died down. I checked it after a little less than a month, and the fly larvae had it almost perfectly down to the bone. Basically like beetles do, except no burying. Just neglected it in a black trash bag in the sun for a month. Really saved a lot of time on skinning/picking away at the back of the skull during the sous vide process
A five gallon bucket will work fine and won’t melt at 140 degrees. If you can find a more oval or rectangular bucket it will work better for deer and elk down the road, but antelope skull is small enough that even a round 5 gallon bucket will work.Will a 5 gallon bucket work for a sous vide container? Don't know how hot these things get and don't want to melt something.
Looks like amazon has sous vide machines for $40. Probably works better than a fish tank heater.
Thanks!