Hey All,
I'm heading to my butcher's shop now but last night I picked up a
small amount of oak- some rough, some planed and on the way home I
came upon a car/deer collision only seconds old. After making sure
the occupants were okay I saw that the 9 pointer was still alive but
really in bad shape. A witness to the collision (in the opposite
lane) arrived after making a u-turn and he and I restrained the deer
until I could kill it. Not wanting to waste meat we set it in the
pickup bed, trying to avoid the lumber and later I field dressed it in
my back yard. (Under lights, with running water, etc.... All the nice
things about having a hunter friendly house.)
Anyway, my future steak supply bled on some of the oak I had. I hope
it won't stain too deeply. Has this ever happened to anyone else?
Any good recommendations for getting blood- deer or others- out of
wood? I already damp wiped the congealed blood from the affected
boards but there is some staining apparent.
Marc (who's wife enjoys the venison he brings home,
regardless of its source)
On Nov 9, 6:21 am, David Bridgeman <[email protected]>
wrote:
> marc rosen wrote:
> > Hey All,
> > I'm heading to my butcher's shop now but last night I picked up a
> > small amount of oak- some rough, some planed and on the way home I
> > came upon a car/deer collision only seconds old. After making sure
> > the occupants were okay I saw that the 9 pointer was still alive but
> > really in bad shape. A witness to the collision (in the opposite
> > lane) arrived after making a u-turn and he and I restrained the deer
> > until I could kill it. Not wanting to waste meat we set it in the
> > pickup bed, trying to avoid the lumber and later I field dressed it in
> > my back yard. (Under lights, with running water, etc.... All the nice
> > things about having a hunter friendly house.)
> > Anyway, my future steak supply bled on some of the oak I had. I hope
> > it won't stain too deeply. Has this ever happened to anyone else?
> > Any good recommendations for getting blood- deer or others- out of
> > wood? I already damp wiped the congealed blood from the affected
> > boards but there is some staining apparent.
> > Marc (who's wife enjoys the venison he brings home,
> > regardless of its source)
>
> Marc,
>
> I used to work for the American Red Cross Blood Services in Central
> Maryland. On a blood spill (as mentioned in other posts) rinse with
> water, cold water. Also, peroxide often helped on clothing (after damp
> with water).
>
> Dave - Parkville
I second that. Had some extensive dental work done a
few years back -- bone grafts, sinus lift, in preparation
for implants. Surgeon told me to wear an old t-shirt,
since I'd never get the blood out. Cold water (won't
set the blood proteins by converting albumin into
globulin) plus peroxide (to bleach out the hemoglobin)
restored my ruined shirt to like-new condition.
"marc rosen" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hey All,
> I'm heading to my butcher's shop now but last night I picked up a
> small amount of oak- some rough, some planed and on the way home I
> came upon a car/deer collision only seconds old. After making sure
> the occupants were okay I saw that the 9 pointer was still alive but
> really in bad shape. A witness to the collision (in the opposite
> lane) arrived after making a u-turn and he and I restrained the deer
> until I could kill it. Not wanting to waste meat we set it in the
> pickup bed, trying to avoid the lumber and later I field dressed it in
> my back yard. (Under lights, with running water, etc.... All the nice
> things about having a hunter friendly house.)
> Anyway, my future steak supply bled on some of the oak I had. I hope
> it won't stain too deeply. Has this ever happened to anyone else?
> Any good recommendations for getting blood- deer or others- out of
> wood? I already damp wiped the congealed blood from the affected
> boards but there is some staining apparent.
> Marc (who's wife enjoys the venison he brings home,
> regardless of its source)
>
Peroxide will take care of the hemoglobin problem, as Kate says, though the
cells will still be there. Planing will probably do for it if you want to
skip the bleach.
You _did_ get a permit for the road kill, right? I remember a couple of
guys who dressed a roadkill moose up here a few years back and were
prosecuted for their efforts. Protected or some such.
DO NOT take any feathers from a roadkill eagle!!!!!!!
On Sat, 3 Nov 2007 09:32:33 -0500, [email protected] (Ross Hebeisen) wrote:
>get more deer blood and stain it all the same.
>ross
Damn... Now THAT'S thinking outside the box...
I like it!
Maybe, since the OP referred to a butcher shop, they have access to other
types/shades that could complete the project..
Home made bloodwood?
mac
Please remove splinters before emailing
Hey Marc,
Sure do wish *I* were the one putting that buck meat in the freezer!
I would like to suggest peroxide. Good old 3% that you buy at the drug store
for about 89 cents a quart.
It works for removing blood from fabric, so it should help a little with the
wood.
It may bleach the wood a little though, as it will fade the color from non
colorfast fabric.
Kate
"marc rosen" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
Hey All,
I'm heading to my butcher's shop now but last night I picked up a
small amount of oak- some rough, some planed and on the way home I
came upon a car/deer collision only seconds old. After making sure
the occupants were okay I saw that the 9 pointer was still alive but
really in bad shape. A witness to the collision (in the opposite
lane) arrived after making a u-turn and he and I restrained the deer
until I could kill it. Not wanting to waste meat we set it in the
pickup bed, trying to avoid the lumber and later I field dressed it in
my back yard. (Under lights, with running water, etc.... All the nice
things about having a hunter friendly house.)
Anyway, my future steak supply bled on some of the oak I had. I hope
it won't stain too deeply. Has this ever happened to anyone else?
Any good recommendations for getting blood- deer or others- out of
wood? I already damp wiped the congealed blood from the affected
boards but there is some staining apparent.
Marc (who's wife enjoys the venison he brings home,
regardless of its source)
"marc rosen" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Marc (who's wife enjoys the venison he brings home,
> regardless of its source)
Yum, Yum! Road kill!
Am off myself this afternoon to start reducing the doe population here
in Texas.
--
NuWave Dave in Houston
marc rosen wrote:
> Hey All,
> I'm heading to my butcher's shop now but last night I picked up a
> small amount of oak- some rough, some planed and on the way home I
> came upon a car/deer collision only seconds old. After making sure
> the occupants were okay I saw that the 9 pointer was still alive but
> really in bad shape. A witness to the collision (in the opposite
> lane) arrived after making a u-turn and he and I restrained the deer
> until I could kill it. Not wanting to waste meat we set it in the
> pickup bed, trying to avoid the lumber and later I field dressed it in
> my back yard. (Under lights, with running water, etc.... All the nice
> things about having a hunter friendly house.)
> Anyway, my future steak supply bled on some of the oak I had. I hope
> it won't stain too deeply. Has this ever happened to anyone else?
> Any good recommendations for getting blood- deer or others- out of
> wood? I already damp wiped the congealed blood from the affected
> boards but there is some staining apparent.
> Marc (who's wife enjoys the venison he brings home,
> regardless of its source)
>
Marc,
I used to work for the American Red Cross Blood Services in Central
Maryland. On a blood spill (as mentioned in other posts) rinse with
water, cold water. Also, peroxide often helped on clothing (after damp
with water).
Dave - Parkville
marc rosen <[email protected]> wrote in news:1194097968.735666.87870@
19g2000hsx.googlegroups.com:
> Any good recommendations for getting blood- deer or others- out of
> wood?
Good story!
I'm not a hunter, but I believe that an oxalic acid solution might take
care of it. Rinse off with plenty of water, multiple times.
I could be wrong ...
--
Best regards
Han
email address is invalid
On Sat, 03 Nov 2007 06:52:48 -0700, marc rosen <[email protected]> wrote:
>Any good recommendations for getting blood- deer or others- out of
>wood?
Oxalic acid bleaches,
It will lighten old oak about as much as cutting into fresh oak, but you
can reverse this with ammonia fuming.
marc rosen wrote:
...
> small amount of oak- some rough, some planed and on the way home I
> came upon a car/deer collision only seconds old. ...
> Anyway, my future steak supply bled on some of the oak I had. I hope
> it won't stain too deeply. Has this ever happened to anyone else?
> Any good recommendations for getting blood- deer or others- out of
> wood? ...
The rough probably won't be much of a problem unless it sat in a
pool--it will probably be gone when surface it.
The other, rinse thoroughly (a little late by now, of course). I'd just
plan on using as normal, then if there is evidence, the oxalic acid
(wood bleach) is where I'd go. It will bleach the wood, too, though,
particularly if it is red oak, so you'll undoubtedly want to do a
uniform treatment and may then need to even color back out before finishing.
--
On Sat, 3 Nov 2007 09:32:33 -0500, [email protected] (Ross Hebeisen)
wrote:
>get more deer blood and stain it all the same.
Not on oak. There's always a risk of iron stain developing from the iron
in the blood, which will lead to uneven blue or black stains.
If you're going to make blood-soaked furniture like a pig-killing bench,
use a low-tannin timber like beech or maple, rather than oak.
"Andy Dingley" <[email protected]> wrote
Not on oak. There's always a risk of iron stain developing from the iron
in the blood, which will lead to uneven blue or black stains.
It might be pretty with the dark stains....
Kate