Bleeding Question

Nor particularly wish to.^^

OP (Total Eclipse) asked a perfectly legitimate question that all big game hunters ask themselves when starting out. Is blood drained from the game animal desirable? Yes it is in order to harvest a carcass in the best possible condition it certainly is.

Can that be best achieved by a heart lung shot traversing the animal and causing massive organ failure. Yes, particularly since there will be always be massive amounts of bleeding internally. The tiny bit of meat lost in a straight thru and thru (taking care of course to stay away from the shoulder) is inconsequential.

Heart lung shots also have the added advantage of being significantly larger vital areas in which a high percentage of humane killing shots can be achieved - particularly at any distance. The head is very uncertain and many times is the result of very horrific wounds when not executed precisely. I have seen evidence of this in the field. Jaw shot off etc. No clear advantage is gained from a head shot and there can be many downsides as pointed out earlier.

My advice to OP is give yourself every possible break to harvest a prime animal in peak condition that you can proudly share with family and friends.
You shouldn't have to apologize for game than is less than the best you can deliver. Happy Hunting!!
 
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You"re the one looking silly and obviously have little experience with wildlife that's been shot in the field. By the time you get to the location of your animal that's been shot it's all over. No more blood will come from a cut throat. As previously stated - A slaughter house is not the same as hunting in field conditions.

Can You tell me why when I got to the location of my moose that had been shot in the head and then thoroughly cut its throat, no blood came out?? Also when I opened up the animal no blood in the cavity???? When I butchered the animal after going home I had a hell of a mess on the table - Why was that??

You show your lack of practical experience with comments like that. Some people have actually gone out and done that.

Having trouble with multiquote on my phone….


What does any of this have to do with your previously incorrect comment? Now you’re trying to say you meant the heart would be done beating by the time you get to the animal in the field?

C’mon man, just admit you were very wrong and move on.
 
Anyone who has gutted an animal that has been shot through the heart/lung has seen the body cavity full of blood.

You will see very little blood after hanging.

If you butcher and vac seal a deer the day it has been shot versus after a week of hanging then you will see a difference in the package when you defrost the meat.
 
On prairie farms was pretty common to handle your own meat every Fall - was usual to have a "butchering day" - chickens, turkeys, a couple pigs, a beef. As I recall, the beef was dressed and skinned and the carcass was hung as long as it could be kept cool and not freeze - 10 days or more. Pigs - I have ground up pork meat while still warm from the butchering - we did not think it needed aging. So, wild game meat was sort of in between - many deer were frozen stiff by the time we got back from hunting - so about no aging occurs when frozen - and others got a day or two hanging, without freezing, before I got time to cut them up. Others that I know would have deer hanging with hide on for months - frozen solid - I am not sure what that was accomplishing - except it was not usually spoiling that way. A Ukrainian butcher in North East Sask told me he liked to hang "big" moose or elk bulls for several days or weeks in his cooler before he cuts them up - actually he said he hung them (at plus 2 C or 3 C) until the outside of the carcass felt "sticky" to the palm of his bare hand - although he cut up the smaller bulls and the cows that I got, within a day or two of me getting them.
 
If you butcher and vac seal a deer the day it has been shot versus after a week of hanging then you will see a difference in the package when you defrost the meat.

most of that will just be water content though, not actual "blood". It's just because its been dry aged for a week.

The reason it's so "wet" after thawing is the water crystalizes+expands and breaks the cell walls that contained it.
 
Nor particularly wish to.^^

OP (Total Eclipse) asked a perfectly legitimate question that all big game hunters ask themselves when starting out. Is blood drained from the game animal desirable? Yes it is in order to harvest a carcass in the best possible condition it certainly is.

Can that be best achieved by a heart lung shot traversing the animal and causing massive organ failure. Yes, particularly since there will be always be massive amounts of bleeding internally. The tiny bit of meat lost in a straight thru and thru (taking care of course to stay away from the shoulder) is inconsequential.

Heart lung shots also have the added advantage of being significantly larger vital areas in which a high percentage of humane killing shots can be achieved - particularly at any distance. The head is very uncertain and many times is the result of very horrific wounds when not executed precisely. I have seen evidence of this in the field. Jaw shot off etc. No clear advantage is gained from a head shot and there can be many downsides as pointed out earlier.

My advice to OP is give yourself every possible break to harvest a prime animal in peak condition that you can proudly share with family and friends.
You shouldn't have to apologize for game than is less than the best you can deliver. Happy Hunting!!

I would add that the "cook" makes significant difference as well - my wife came from an essentially non-hunting family - much experience on West Coast with wild things from the ocean, but not so much with wild things from the land. She tells me is very different to do a deer roast versus a beef roast - wild animals typically do not have fat layered or marbled within the muscles - meaning you likely want to go slower to cook wild stuff and to use a "moist" method, if possible. Has to do with your ethnicity and background I think - her GrandMa was basically "Cornish", from England, and was "known" that you had to soak grouse overnight in salt water before cooking it - was totally "news" to us "stubble jumpers" that grew up on the Canadian Prairies.

Some will use the differences to their advantage - beef sausage should not taste like pork sausage or like deer sausage - neither should the roasts. But very lean ground deer makes very rich, nice gravy - is just excellent in a chili or stew - done very lean - more so than you can buy in a store. To the point that we now take the back straps and freeze them in about 8 inch to 12 inch (20 cm to 30 cm) lengths, then marinade overnight when sliced into about 3/4" (2 cm) thick pieces - then on to the BBQ. I sometimes will take a few roasts from rear end, but most of the rest of a deer will get trimmed very lean and ground up. Others are very much into "steaks" and so on - good for them - our preference is for better beef steaks, when we decide to have steak, which is not more than a time or two a month.

It is my impression that "good" meat can be ruined by not handling it properly - an unnecessary delay in getting the guts out or the hide off, for example. Or not being fussy enough when "field dressing" and leaving bits of gut or other offal in the carcass. Letting the meat freeze and then thaw, a couple times, does not seem to do it any good. Especially with start of that CWD, we no longer cut across bone - our deer are essentially "filleted" - not freezing any bones in the freezer, any more.
 
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If you butcher and vac seal a deer the day it has been shot versus after a week of hanging then you will see a difference in the package when you defrost the meat.

I have found this as well. So now I let the deer hang in my garage for a few days but even with all this, the trimming I place in tubs will still have blood at the bottom of the tubs the next day.
 
If it's protein and water from outside the cells it is blood. If it's from inside the cells it is not blood.

The blood that was in the circulatory system just stays there...

A guy should take a cut from a deer that drowned, put it in the fridge and listen to guys say the red stuff isn't blood but water and protein.
 
If it's protein and water from outside the cells it is blood. If it's from inside the cells it is not blood.

The blood that was in the circulatory system just stays there...

A guy should take a cut from a deer that drowned, put it in the fridge and listen to guys say the red stuff isn't blood but water and protein.

Now you're comparing a deer that drowned to one that's been shot? Keep moving those goalposts, you'll get there eventually...

Nobody is saying blood CAN'T be in meat. You're arguing against a point nobody is making.
 
Now you're comparing a deer that drowned to one that's been shot? Keep moving those goalposts, you'll get there eventually...

Nobody is saying blood CAN'T be in meat. You're arguing against a point nobody is making.

I'm not the one claiming that magically meat doesn't bleed in the fridge.
 
I'm not the one claiming that magically meat doesn't bleed in the fridge.

No, You claimed meat that has been killed, had the blood drained, then been aged a few weeks, THEN butchered, is still bleeding at the grocery store.

Meat keeps bleeding after you butcher it, that's why they put those maxi pads in the tray at the grocery store.

That is simply wrong. There may be TINY amounts of blood left, but that is NOT what those maxi pads as you call them are for, and what you see in the bottom of your steak package is not blood, as evidenced by the fact it doesn't turn to jelly.
 
I'm not wrong and my reply wasn't in regard to ethics, only that a heart continues to beat after a headshot. Google Intrinsic Cardiac Nervous System if you don't believe me.


The same applies to commercial operations. Just because an animal has a large hole in its brain doesn't mean it becomes a ragdoll. There are many parts of internal organs still functioning for a brief period of time. The one we’re primarily focused on is the heart.

Because the heart keeps beating after a shot to the head, blood is still flowing for a short time before death. With a quick cut to a major artery or organ within seconds of the incapacitation shot, the heart will work to pump out most of the blood in the animal. Blood is the vehicle that carries oxygen to the brain, so without blood, what's left of the brain ceases to function. This combination of incapacitation and bleeding out is what ensures a quick, humane death.


https://www.themeateater.com/cook/butchering-and-processing/do-you-need-to-bleed-deer

this is correct.
 
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