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How to butcher your own deer


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I consider the processing part of the hunt. I would consider it one of the funner parts actually. I can't wait to shoot one so I can start butchering.

I've said before and I'll offer again, if someone wants to learn, I would be willing to help/teach. I have a large, heated garage, a vacuum sealer and a large grinder. Chip in for sealer bags and the rest is free.

PS, I'm in Eden Prairie. SW metro

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this is part of the hunt, i agree 100%.

I work at a butcher shop during the deer season, and some people just dont have the time, or space to do it on there own. Or just dont want to do it.

Its a good time, but can get to be longggggg hours, if its a good year of hunting!

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that chart isn't much of a visual aid. It only shows where particular cuts come from. One has to be familiar with and where primal & sub primal cuts come from and the nomenclature of finished products from the sub primals. Nor does it address the skeletal or musculate structures or the inherent properties of particular muscles.

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Paul if you have access to different charts or directions for cleaning, post them here or email them to me and I will post them. I know these aren't perfect, I am still learning how to do it after processing my own deer for the last 4 years......Sharp knives really help

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After butchering my first deer on my own after watching someone else for a minimal amount of time I would recomend to all hunters to give it s shot. Its alot easier than it sounds and you really cant do much wrong. The finer points of it are getting your desired cuts of meat but otherwise you just cut along the muscle lines and it comes right off! Plus some butchers shops just take electric saws to the deer and cut through alot of the bones...plus you never know whos deer you are actually getting!!!

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Our party gets together for a day and butchers as a group. If you dont help butcher...you dont get any meat...even if you shot it!!

We divide up the scraps and all steaks/roasts evenly. Most of us grind the scraps on our own, or bring them in to have something done with them.

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Picks,

I just noticed you posted this blush. Shows how much I look at sticky's grin

Doing your own deer processing is pretty easy and self rewarding. If you have any questions that the original link does not answer, please feel free to ask in here.

The charts in my original deer hunting post are pretty vague, but are better than nothing. They are geared more to the person who has some experience prior and is looking to just get his or hers mind flowing again, before digging into the deer. Yes, if you do have some better charts, by all means feel free to post them or e-mail them to Picks or my self.

[email protected]

Good luck cutting smile

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It depends on whether or not you have all of the gear already (i.e. gun, clothing, stands, place to hunt). The up front cost is pretty steep if you are starting out from scratch. Usual take from a 100lb (dressed) doe is about 40 - 50lbs bullets are about .75 to 1.25 a piece and a resident tag is $28.

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I think that it would be much cheaper to hunt at the local butcher shop eek My body dropped off 3 deer last year to get processed and he forgot to have them do the regular cuts. Everything was ground up into Polish sausage, summer sausage and beer sticks eek It was an expensive mistake that tasted very good crazy

Hunting with a big group and guys comming and going it is difficult to get everyone together to help butcher the deer. The same guys cut and wrap every year. If we breakdown the cost between the number of hunters it is not too expensive to have a local cut and wrap for us. The sausage is what drives the price up. I would rather spend the $40.00 for my share and still get to hunt another day. We have 9 guys and split the cost evenly. We never fill all tags.

We will cut up one or two deer midweek but not 5 or 6.

Good Luck to all

Steve

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fellas....fellas....fellas...NEVER, EVER count the money you spend on a hobby. Huntin can get alittle on the spendy side but, the equipment will last a life time and you can eat the results. Not much like bowling where all ya got is a loud noise of pins fallin over and a lot of /'s & X's.

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My best advice for cutting up your own deer is just do it. That's what my wife and I did after the guy I had do it kept raising his prices. We picked up a cheap hand grinder and what we screwed up, we just ground it up. After doing it for several years now, we're getting pretty good at it.

Some tips for ground venison, add a little beef fat or pork fat to it. Get some brat seasoning and make brat patties (or other seasonings) and some of it we like to add some bacon as we're grinding it.

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We process and smoke our own too, much like the rest of you. We have been smoking for close to 25 years and it's a highlight of the whole year. When we don't get enough deer in our group we have friends in Iowa and Wisc. that shoot more then enough and then we get a shipment!

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