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the Fur Trade and Hudson's Bay Company
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Preparing the Furs: Cleaning the Pelt

The fur trade followed the seasons. Trapping and hunting were carried on in the winter because the fur is thickest and in the best (or prime) condition. There were many different kinds of traps, including snares, which would trap the animal in a wire noose, and baited traps, which would attract the animal with food or another substance. The deadfall trap, which dropped a heavy weight onto the animal to kill it, was commonly used by First Nations people for beavers. Traps had to be checked often to ensure that other animals would not eat the captured prey.

Man with made beaver pelt
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Beaver pelt stretching on frame

Once skin was removed from the animal, they had to be prepared. In North America, Aboriginal women usually did the work. They either stretched the furs out on a frame or pegged them to the ground.

  • First, the inside of the skin had to be scraped clean of meat and fat.
  • Then it was smeared with a mixture such as cooked brains or liver.
  • After one to three days, the skin was washed and rubbed with a tight rope until it was dry and soft.
Did you know?
An Aboriginal woman could tan an average of about twenty buffalo robes per winter.


The women also had another job. There are two types of fur: The first layer on the outside is rough and is called guard hair. It protects the inner (ground) layer and is waterproof. The ground layer is soft and feels like velvet. Aboriginal women pulled the long guard hairs out of the pelt, leaving only the softer ground hair behind.

Did you know?
Fur traders preferred furs that Aboriginal people had worn. This was because while they were wearing them the guard hairs fell out, leaving only the valuable ground hair behind.

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