.338Lapua? Wow...you like to live dangerously, using such light armament. I wonder if that would even stop a determined charge from a big buck 'chuck?I used my 338 Lapua back in the day, they’d flip at least six feet into the air, spinning in their own blood. It was absolutely epic.
I've smoked one this year with a .375H&H and that seemed about right. Mostly I fall back on a .45-70. It doesn't really penetrate per se ; rather, the big slug just seems to sort of pick up the critter and carry it away across the field with it.
Okay, since the thread is starting to get a little silly, I'm not 100% sure if you're serious or not? Back in the day, I always reasoned that a chuck should be every bit as good to eat as a rabbit...but that didn't work out for us when we tried it. My father performed the culinary artistry, I just provided a gutted/skinned/dressed carcass for the project. Carefully spiced, poked with garlic cloves, lovingly simmered in a Dutch oven, basted periodically...virtually inedible.In BC, yellow belly marmots are protected by law, other than on private property.
Yes, they are delicious.
If they're tough, it's because you aren't cooking them properly.
I've eaten a lot of them over the decades. They make great pepperoni sticks as well.
The large ones can be tough, mostly because they're older. Just like old chickens, there are ways to prepare the meat so it's palatable.
They taste very much like rabbit and should be processed in a similar manner.
I soak the older ones in baking soda/water overnight and slow cook them in a beer brine for the afternoon. By dinnertime they're tender and tasty.
As for smell, anything shot in the guts and blown up smells bad.
When I skin out a marmot, I open up the back at the neck and down to the tail. The skin is very tough/thick, so have a sharp knife. I use a box cutter with disposable blades.
Don't puncture the paunch membrane, remove the front meat on the shoulders, then the tow back straps and separate both hind legs from the body. Leave everything else intact and dispose of it properly, as there isn't any meat on it worth mentioning, unless you're starving.
I've served a lot of people marmot, and they thought they were eating rabbit.
They young ones, I only take the two back straps and the hind legs, they're usually quite tender, unless food is scarce.
I don't recall the size of the critter, but it was likely the biggest one I got that day so in hindsight not a wonderful choice. But you have me wondering about this again; the ones we now get in and around the yard are always small ones, young-of-the-year who are spreading out into new territories to set up their own home ranges. In other words, probably the best choice for the table.
Dang it, I'm gonna try again! I'm goin' in...