soak it in water an let i boil and let it sit in there and some will fall off, then when thats don't just try to scrape it off, then after that bleach them.
I saw a show on some guy who collects the bones of road kill for science. He places the carcasses in wire mesh boxes in the woods where he finds them. The insects and micro-organisms take care of the rest. I'd think you could do the same with a fish.
The Smithsonian uses carrion beetles. They maintain a population of them to clean skeletons. That would top eelskins in the fridge as far as scream factors go. I'd put the fish on a 1/4"wire square bed and cover it with a chickenwire or finer cage. put it near an anthill.
He that would make his own liberty secure, must guard even his enemy from oppression; for if he violates this duty, he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself.
Thomas Paine
The Smithsonian uses carrion beetles. They maintain a population of them to clean skeletons. That would top eelskins in the fridge as far as scream factors go. I'd put the fish on a 1/4"wire square bed and cover it with a chickenwire or finer cage. put it near an anthill.
People on this board know the strangest things.
Never cease to amaze me.