To make many of the more advanced tools and weapons associated with wilderness survival you will need two animal products, sinew and rawhide. What sinew is, how to obtain it, and how to process it is the subject of this post.
What is Sinew?
Sinew can be obtained from the tendons of any mammal. Tendons are the tough stringy things that attach muscles to bones. When these tendons are processed into sinew they provide a wonderful material that can be used to make super strong cordage, good sewing thread, and they can be used as a binding twine to attach arrowheads, arrow fletchings, knife blades, spear points, drill points and etc. Sinew is as tough as nylon, and it is impregnated with its own natural glue that can be activated with a little moisture. Sinew shrinks a little when it dries so that is binds things together tightly. Sinew will last for hundreds of years if it is protected from moisture. In short, sinew is a super material that has no modern equivalent. The only down-side to sinew is that it must be kept dry. If you get it wet it will soften and stretch, and whatever you have bound together with it will come apart. If you think that any sinew that you have used may be exposed to moisture, you must coat it with pine sap or some other agent that will waterproof it.
How do You Obtain Sinew?
One of the most widely available sources of sinew is from the deer, although elk or buffalo will work just as well. The most useful sinews are located in the lower legs and along the upper back lying over the back straps. If you hunt deer you can remove both the leg and back sinews when you are butchering. If you have friends that hunt you can ask them to bring you the lower legs when they butcher. The lower legs have no usable meat on them and most people just cut them off and throw them away. Hunters will usually be glad to give you this part of their kill even if they do think you’re a little strange for wanting it. You can even go to most packing houses during deer season and they are often glad to get rid of any legs that they have. All of my friends know that I want deer legs and I usually get anywhere from twenty to fifty a year just for the asking. Pictured below: deer leg
How do You Process Sinew?
To remove the sinews, you need a sharp knife or a good sharp flake of flint. Slice down the back of the leg from knee joint to just above the dew claws and peel the skin back. Lying just below the skin is a white membrane. This membrane encases the tendon which lies in a shallow groove down the back of the leg bone.
Split open the membrane and you will see a milky white cord looking thing. This is the tendon.
You can usually slip your finger under the edge of the tendon and lift it up out of the bone a little. When you get the tendon up out of the groove, run your knife up and down to loosen the tendon even more.
I usually run my knife down toward the hoof, and when I can’t go any farther, I turn the blade up and slice through the tendon freeing that end. You can then grab the tendon with you hand and peel it out down toward the knee joint. When you pull up as much of the tendon as you can get, cut that end off with your knife.
There may be some membrane left sticking to the tendon (kind of a slimy case) and if you can remove this it will be helpful although it’s not vitally necessary.When you have a white floppy tendon in your hand, the hard part is done.
Just set the tendon out in the sun or on the kitchen drain board if your spouse is out of town. In less than twenty-four hours the soft wet tendon will be hard, dry, and kind of a translucent yellow color. It looks a lot like plastic.
Now take the dried tendon and use a smooth round rock or the round end of a ball peen hammer and start pounding. What ever you pound with, it needs to be rounded. Flat edges, like the flat of a hammer or axe, will cut the fibers in the sinew.
As you pound, the sinew will start to turn white, and it will begin to separate into fluffy white fibers. You can now take you fingers and pull apart the fibers is small bundles about the thickness of a pencil lead or smaller.
These little fiber bundles are what you’re looking for. You can use them to back a bow, make a bow string, sew leather together, tie on arrowheads etc.
To use the sinew to, for example, tie on an arrow head; all you have to do is pop a piece in your mouth and chew on it a little. Don’t be squeamish. It’s no different than chewing on a piece of deer jerky. The saliva in your mouth and the gentle chewing will soften the sinew in seconds. Don’t chew too long or you will wash all of the glue out of the sinew.
When the sinew is soft remove it from your mouth and wrap it around your arrowhead. You don’t have to tie it off because the sinew will stick to itself. Set it in the sun for twenty or thirty minutes and it will dry hard and tight. Coat the sinew with melted pine sap or carpenter’s glue and let it dry. Pictured below: sinew bow string, arrowhead, spearhead, and knife blade all attached with sinew; and sinew backing on an elm wood bow.
That’s all there is to it. Amazing isn’t it!
Just found this...very cool!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for taking the time to put this information out!
Very helpful!
ReplyDeleteHow do you work the sinew into longer pieces, connecting them?
Very helpful!
ReplyDeleteHow do you work the sinew into longer pieces, connecting them?
By cording it Google cording
ReplyDeleteVery helpful - thanks!
ReplyDeleteVery good article that I used recently to harvest sinew lately. I saved a few other articles/projects you've written for future reference to try. I really appreciate and enjoy your blog- I would love to see more how-tos in the future. Please keep up the good work- would love to be in contact and learn more!
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ReplyDeleteThought that this was really cool, I had no idea that you could use sinew this way. Thanks for such a cool article.
ReplyDeleteMay be a weird question but seeing as how sinew is basically animal tendon is it possible to make sinew for a bow string out of like rabbit or small game tendon?
ReplyDeleteAll sinew is basically the same. The problem with small game sinew is that it is so short that you would have scores, maybe hundreds, of splices in a bow string. Lots of work, and also the splices are the weakness of the string. With long sinews like deer or elk you have fewer splices and they can be arranged so that they are not so close together.
ReplyDeleteHank
Thank you. Excellent explanation and very helpful pictures!
ReplyDeleteWhat about backing a bow?
ReplyDeleteI have a three part post on sinew backing a bow. They are under the Primitive Archery tab. Here is the first one https://sensiblesurvival.org/2012/03/06/how-to-sinew-back-a-wooden-bow-part-1/
ReplyDeleteHank
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteLiked the article. I'm only 17 but I have always been into primitive survival techniques and survival. I've learned many ways to making fire primitively and different edible plants but this is the first time I got a look into making weapons and harvesting sinew from an animal. I can't wait to try it for myself someday and learn ways to make primitive weapons and tools.Very entertaining and informing, I love what you do.
ReplyDelete