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JerryBobCo
Posts: 8,227 Senior Member
Do you do your own butchering?

I've done it myself, and had the butchering done by a butcher/meat processor. I've even butchered a couple of elk. That's a big job.
This year, during our Montana hunt, we dropped our kill off at a local meat processor who had it ready for us before we left for home. He did a good job, although he put way too much sage in the breakfast sausage for my taste.
All things considered, I would just as soon pay someone to do it.
How about you?
Jerry
Gun control laws make about as much sense as taking ex-lax to cure a cough.
Gun control laws make about as much sense as taking ex-lax to cure a cough.
Replies
One year, I did a deer myself. Layed it out on the meat bags on the kitchen table. Heard an ugly noise. Swamp cooler broke. Put it all away, multiple trips to home depot, multiple trips to the roof. Finally finished the deer later. Never again.
JAY
We bring our deer in from the field...hang them up, skin them and then gut them...dropping the gut pile into a bucket lined with a hefty bag. That ends up in the freezer for later use as coyote bait. Skinning them first keeps most of the hair off of and out of the carcass.
I can have a deer boned out and in the cooler in about an hour....
Then the wife and I reduce the major cuts, trim off all the fat and silver skin and package with a vacuum sealer. Actually, grinding burger for sausage is the most time consuming part of the operation....
One trick I used to use for antelope was to skin and hang them as soon as possible, and bag them in a game bag. As soon as I got home, I would quarter them and put the quarters in a large cooler with ice. I would then pour salt over the meat, open the drain valve of the cooler, prop up the end opposite the valve, and put it under a shade. That allowed the melted ice to drain.
Every day I would add salt and ice. I could usually leave it like this for about a week until I had time to butcher it. I boned it out, too.
I would always return home on the day I shot the goat, so there was no overnight in the field stuff to worry about. Transporting with a bag of ice in the body cavity seemed to help, too.
Gun control laws make about as much sense as taking ex-lax to cure a cough.
I pay someone as I'm really not very good at it. Heck I'd be lying if I used the word good in any part of it!
John 3: 1-21
Son that's somebody with nothing to do with his time but keep me in trouble with mom.
Son that's somebody with nothing to do with his time but keep me in trouble with mom.
Someone mentioned grinding taking the longest...I agree. Making sausage takes a while as well.
Adam J. McCleod
Son that's somebody with nothing to do with his time but keep me in trouble with mom.
Mid-season, if it's cold enough, it's still a toss up as to how lazy I'm feeling and/or if I want specialty meats like sausage or sticks made.
Late season, when it's super cold and the garage will stay that way for days, I lose my excuses and will usually just gambrel the animal and do it myself.
The only thing I have a meat market do is grind or make sausage out of whatever I want.
Used to grind my own. Lost a finger doing it. Now I have someone else do it. More time/cost effective.
I am with a lot of people that the big deer processing places probably don’t treat the meat with the respect that I used to do when I did it all myself. Also, they might not get you your exact animal. But I have seen my local shop turn away hunters that bring in animals that he does not think are clean enough to bring into his shop.
-Mikhail Kalashnikov