Do you gut your own deer?

Do you gut your own deer?

  • Yes, for the most part I gut my own kills.

    Votes: 412 93.8%
  • No, I don't know how to.

    Votes: 10 2.3%
  • Ewwww! I ain't touching that!

    Votes: 11 2.5%
  • I leave it to the designated gutter and will explain why.

    Votes: 6 1.4%

  • Total voters
    439
Ya, I have to admit that I never thought much about any of this until the deer camp rules thread popped up. Never knew that deer hunting in Ontario was that different but it is kinda cool to learn about what goes on in other parts of the country.......it's been a very educational couple threads! Always a good day when you learn something!:D

This whole camp hierarchy thing; designated hitters, gutters, kitchen_#####es - all based on senority. All that's missing is a shop stewart!

Everyone one who hunts should have the most basic knowledge of field prep'n an animal. Some folks will be more proficient due to experience. I don't expect my 9 year old to Ginsu a deer by himself, but I do expect him to take an act role, even if his involvement slows the process down to a pace that others aren't comfortable with.


Hakx
 
I often split the pelvis in the field. On a small deer, I can usually do this with a knife. With a large deer, I use a folding saw that I carry on my belt. I have done the coring method, I just prefer splitting.

We always split the rib cage (drywall saw $4) We used to split the pelvic bone (knife,drywall saw or hatchet)
This year we made 2 cuts and removed it.Takes hardly anymore time and leaves nothing for the guts to hang up on.
 
Reach down and cut entrails off so about 10 inches of poop tube hangs out of the body cavity. Tie off poop tube so poop doesn't get on critter during trip home. (30 seconds).

I have actually never seen, or heard of this. I've always cut through the pelvis, and cut the poop tube out with the rest of it. If you cut and tie the poop tube as in above, do you not risk getting nasties in the cavity?
 
Last season we had 2 new hunters in our group age 15&16 so I shot a doe in the head and brought it to HQ with the guts in to teach them how to field dress. With do damage to the chest cavity it is really easy to see and teach someone the process, the next two were there job and both did a good job. This year they both shot bucks and both came back to camp grinning from ear to ear with 2 clean deer and said thier dads were taking lessons form them. I only had to show them once and wish a few of the "seasoned" hunters were half as good as the two young guys. I always thought it was a simple task but many seem to find it difficult.
Regards
 
When I use to hunt with my uncle and his friend, we had a rule. The guy who shoots it Never guts it.

Now with the gang I hunt with, we all take turns, but usually its my buddy and I since the other guys are gettin longer in the tooth lol. Though, this yr. my buddies son (14yr) got his hands bloodied two times learning how to do it. I usually end doing 2 or 3 a season, but was nice to see the young guy learning it saving my back a bit lol.
 
Gut, skin, cut, grind, wrap freeze, we do it all.
We have had a few guys in camp that needed instruction on gutting, but after a few, they have all done their own. It's just not that big a deal. Even the one guy that just about puked on his first, now has no issues.
 
Wow, I was unaware that other parts of the country have people "designated" to do different tasks... Here in Newfoundland and up in Labrador you go hunting, you kill (hopefully), you clean and you bring home.

I would never EVER be someone else's b*tch and do their dirty work! I can't believe people actually succumb to this. I learned by watching, not by cleaning other people's game.
 
Come to think of it, we actually had to stop a guy and take over the job for him - he was either going to hurt himself or someone else. Excited and unable to focus, he was all over the place - pulling out the gut pile halfway, stop, stab the neck a few times to "bleed it", stop, start reaming the butt, stop. The whole time wielding his knife out in front of him, hopping over branches, slipping on the gut pile he had not yet celared. Lunacy.

I don't hunt with him any more.
 
Practice makes perfect. And if you can't do it on your own, you're always going to be dependent on others. I like dependable people, but it goes against my grain to be dependent.

There's part of me too that feels you shouldn't have the bragging rights of the deer if you're too prissy to get your hands dirty afterwards.
 
I field dress all my own game and I do my wife's and brother in-laws as well. They were both raised in a non-hunting environment I have since converted both of them to hunting but they would rather not do the field dressing. They help me do it and if they had to they both could field dress an animal but since we all hunt together I just take care of it...

I was talking to a meat cutter I know and he actually had a couple of guys show up this year with a mulie during the any point season in BC and they had not field dressed it. It had been sitting in the back of the pick up all day while they hunted for another... When asked why they didn't dress it out they responded because they didn't know how to!! The meat cutter showed them how and told them to make sure they field dress it before bringing in to him LOL... The first time I dressed out a deer without my dad I had a book with me. Knife in one hand book in the other!!!
 
The hunt camp rules thread got me wondering what the deal is with the "designated gutter". I've never heard of this, everyone I hunt with/around guts what they shoot. At the end of the day, everyone usually pitches in with skinning whatever was harvested that day.

I've never heard of the like - once in a while i'll gut for a newbie to show them how or maybe if there's another reason why it makes more sense i'll do it that time, but on the whole i gut mine and others gut theirs - i've never heard of a 'designated gutter' before
 
While my son was taking his hunter training course they showed a video on field dressing where the guy used a hand saw ans cut out the pelvic bone on either side of the rectum and removed it when it came time to pull the entrails he just pulled everything right out the back then cut the sphincter etc. No coring around the anus, no tying, no nothing, and most importantly no mess. I tried it today and it worked like a dream. It's going to be my method from here out.
 
While my son was taking his hunter training course they showed a video on field dressing where the guy used a hand saw ans cut out the pelvic bone on either side of the rectum and removed it when it came time to pull the entrails he just pulled everything right out the back then cut the sphincter etc. No coring around the anus, no tying, no nothing, and most importantly no mess. I tried it today and it worked like a dream. It's going to be my method from here out.

Been doing that for years with a little folding hand saw I keep in my pack. Does he make two cuts at the pelvic?? I only do one right down the middle after a quick circle of the hOle, then pull everything right out the canal.
As someone else mentioned, I too, split the ribs right to the neck, a properly shaped knife will do that job, makes it easier to work around the hernia tissue when the cavity is split right open.
I also always carry a set or rubber gloves, keeps most of the mess to a minimum in the bush where there's sometimes no water for clean up. just peel them of & your done.

Wonder where a guy can find one of those ""designated gutters"" :p
 
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Yep, my first one took me probably 30 minutes to an hour. Many years and many deer later, it now takes me about 3 minutes (including a coffee break) - goes about like this:

Flip deer on back, and split the belly open from ribcage to pelvis (30 seconds, maybe less if I have a gut-hook handy).

Flip deer on to side, cut through diaphragm, and carefully reach up into chest cavity with both arms (and a knife), grab windpipe with one hand, cut wind-pipe up above that hand with kinfe (30 seconds)

Use now severed windpipe for a handle and pull hard on innards, using knife to cut loose any spots that hang up and don't tear loose with vigorous pulling/yanking until guts are all laying on the ground beside the deer (30 seconds).

Stop and sip coffee, wipe blood off of hands, observe results of bullet performance on innards, and make celebratory comments to hunting partner(s) (if any) (60 seconds)

Reach down and cut entrails off so about 10 inches of poop tube hangs out of the body cavity. Tie off poop tube so poop doesn't get on critter during trip home. (30 seconds).

Done - one field dressed deer, ready for hauling/dragging to a more convenient place to string him up for skinning and final preperation of the meat before hanging it to age a bit.

My methods almost identical except for two things:

1/I cut out the scent glands behind the rear 'knees.'

2/I cut around the butt-hole and use bread bag twist tires, the wire type or cotton string, and tie it off, to prevent the pooper from messing up the insides.

Once this is done, I then start the long belly to rib cage cut, and continue pretty much like you do, Brother Jack.

PS: I did not read every post here, but I hesitate to use any kind of saw blade unless absolutely required. If you miss any bone bits during clean up, these bone fragments, Gary D, if missed, contribute to early spoiling of the meat while in the freezer. In the pelvic area, are very close to the best cuts of meat, and I wish not to miss bone fragments/dust there.

If I need a bigger cutting tool, it's a heavy knife or hatchet utilized,(pelvic area) preferably with a single clean blow. I am talking deer here, not elk/moose.
I will say though I do use a saw on the ribs, and I am very careful to prevent particles from dropping into the cavity. (average deer, this is four rib sections, handy BBQ size, ready for the marinade)Also these deer ribs are cooked very soon, usually before the backstraps or tenderloins, so long term frozen storage is not an issue.
 
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