Small game/waterfowl processing

Panzermensch

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Does anyone get their small game or waterfowl professionally processed? I'm in the Ottawa area and my current residential situation makes it limiting as to what I processing I can do
 
That depends on your intended use of the fowl. Do you want them plucked so you can roast the whole bird? Most waterfowl and upland birds are too small to worry about trying to take the meat from the legs. Many people remove the breasts and call it done. If you're only after the breast meat, they're easily carved out regardless of your residential situation. I regularly breast birds on my tailgate outside of an apartment building, but admittedly in a smaller city that Ottawa.
 
Pull a few breast feathers off the bird in the field. Once you get home, skin back the skin and fillet the 2 pieces off.

Home Depot contractor bags (body bags) will hold 6-8 goose carcasses per bag.

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Does anyone get their small game or waterfowl professionally processed? I'm in the Ottawa area and my current residential situation makes it limiting as to what I processing I can do

Stand on the wings with your toes on the wing bones. Grasp the feet in your hands, and haul away. The bird is just about done, except for some small plucking and separating other bits.
 
Taking the breast meat only from a goose seems like a terrible waste to me.

When I get a goose I pluck it entirely and my wife roasts it whole and between the two of us eating the breast meat and legs and thighs, the bones are cooked for soup and we have eaten for a week off one bird.
 
"Professional processing" would only add another expense to an already expensive pass time. Maybe you should educate yourself followed up by real practice?
Pick up a book at the library.

^^yup^^i honestly think one must learn to process thier own game themselves .youll never learn paying someone else.
 
Taking the breast meat only from a goose seems like a terrible waste to me.

When I get a goose I pluck it entirely and my wife roasts it whole and between the two of us eating the breast meat and legs and thighs, the bones are cooked for soup and we have eaten for a week off one bird.

Depends on how you cook it, but I agree that there is far more meat than just the breasts. I usually skin them and cut the breast meat, leg meat and meat off the wings. Usually take the heart out too. I BBQ the heart/leg/wing meat up and we can eat that for two days off one goose. The breast I save for winter and they get made into jerky. Pretty much perfect meat for jerky.
 
Pull a few breast feathers off the bird in the field. Once you get home, skin back the skin and fillet the 2 pieces off.

Home Depot contractor bags (body bags) will hold 6-8 goose carcasses per bag.

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Looks awesome.
My wife then pounds the pieces out , dips them in egg and then into a coating mix and cooks them up schnitzel style.
 
Depends on how you cook it, but I agree that there is far more meat than just the breasts. I usually skin them and cut the breast meat, leg meat and meat off the wings. Usually take the heart out too. I BBQ the heart/leg/wing meat up and we can eat that for two days off one goose. The breast I save for winter and they get made into jerky. Pretty much perfect meat for jerky.

When bone out geese, we take the breasts, the leg/thigh meat, the heart and the gizzard. Most of it goes into sausage, but as above we do schnitzel some of the breasts
 
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