it will be too soon.
Just finished up processing 6 of the buggers by myself (4 bucks - 2 does). We (myself, 2 neighbors and 2 friends from BC) shot them last week (Thurs-Sat). The guys from BC left us the appropriate paperwork and headed home sans meat as we get a bunch of sausage made and take it out to them when they take us salmon fishing in the summer. The neighbors and I were to have a processing party on Monday/Tuesday and get them all in the freezer. Well Sunday afternoon I drove a pencil thick sliver of wood into the sole of my foot that only stopped when it hit bone and then snapped off (like a fricking punji stake). I was on crutches for a couple of days. I'm the chief skinner and cutter and without me leading, the enterprise died on the vine.
One neighbor, a pilot with Westjet had to leave Wed. for extended flights east. The other neighbor a gas line supplies salesman had a business trip to Vancouver the same day.
Soooooo! After work I hobble over to the neighbors skinning garage on Wed. and get one deer skinned and cut. Repeat on Thurs. Repeat on Fri. Saturday I get up early and get 2 more skinned and cut and the last one skinned and roughly jointed. Sunday I finish cutting that one, cape out the heads of two of the bucks for Euro mounts (nothing great there). Then I wrap the meat from the 6 of them and load the non-edibles into the truck for disposal by yote.
Here's what 6 deer cast offs look like in a truck. Half fills the back of the GMC
.
Boiling off the long bones for stock now. Gotta good knife callous on the finger for next time too.
I might actually be able to eat a piece in a week or two.
Just finished up processing 6 of the buggers by myself (4 bucks - 2 does). We (myself, 2 neighbors and 2 friends from BC) shot them last week (Thurs-Sat). The guys from BC left us the appropriate paperwork and headed home sans meat as we get a bunch of sausage made and take it out to them when they take us salmon fishing in the summer. The neighbors and I were to have a processing party on Monday/Tuesday and get them all in the freezer. Well Sunday afternoon I drove a pencil thick sliver of wood into the sole of my foot that only stopped when it hit bone and then snapped off (like a fricking punji stake). I was on crutches for a couple of days. I'm the chief skinner and cutter and without me leading, the enterprise died on the vine.
One neighbor, a pilot with Westjet had to leave Wed. for extended flights east. The other neighbor a gas line supplies salesman had a business trip to Vancouver the same day.
Soooooo! After work I hobble over to the neighbors skinning garage on Wed. and get one deer skinned and cut. Repeat on Thurs. Repeat on Fri. Saturday I get up early and get 2 more skinned and cut and the last one skinned and roughly jointed. Sunday I finish cutting that one, cape out the heads of two of the bucks for Euro mounts (nothing great there). Then I wrap the meat from the 6 of them and load the non-edibles into the truck for disposal by yote.
Here's what 6 deer cast offs look like in a truck. Half fills the back of the GMC
Boiling off the long bones for stock now. Gotta good knife callous on the finger for next time too.
I might actually be able to eat a piece in a week or two.





























(Before I get flamed, we shot 4 of 6 in the head/high neck to avoid such damage.)






















