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Percent edible meat from dressed weight do you actually get?


laker1

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It seems to me I get 4 ice cream pails full of de-boned fat free meat on average. Excluding the back straps, ribs, and any blood shot meat like one front shoulder.

We normally do 2 deer per year, not too picky about size. It seems like it always a 8 lb per pail average and 32 lbs for the grind total. Everybody likes sausage. I don't get to riled up for veni roast so they hit the grind also. I don't keep the heart or rib meat and am pretty picky about how much work I put into the front legs. That can be a real pain in the A$$ filleting off all the silver skin. It depends on how late at night it is and if I have any help.

If I am lucky enough to get a little one or two I usually steak out almost everything. You know you have to be a better shot to get the small ones ;-)

Ferny.

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I did 2 this year, both good shots, no meat lost. I weighed everything when all was done, but didn't weigh either beforehand.

Shot a 2.5 year old 110" buck and butchered myself. Got 23lbs of steaks/chops/roast, and 40 lbs of scraps.

Shot an pretty big adult doe and it got cold so i brought it in for processing. They gave me back 28lbs steaks/chops/roasts and 26 lbs of scraps.

So i got 63 lbs off the buck i did and 54 lbs off the doe they did. I'm thinking they did a better job on the doe than i did on the buck!

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My wife ahot a 1.5 y/o buck this year. I am guessing it was about 130 pounds dressed.

When I was done with cutting it up I had 16 punds of backstrap and tenderloin meat, and 20 pounds of grind and jerkey meat. This was fully deboned, and fat and silver skin trimmed off. There was about 3-4 pounds of damaged tissue on one shoulder, and I did not trim the rib meat out.

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I weighed my buck field dressed at 180 lbs, very little fat on him. It was well hit through the lungs/ribs with no shoulder damaged meat. I weighed the meat at just over 70lbs not counting the heart or tenderloins which I'd already eaten. I trim out the majority of the sinew/fat and take nothing off the ribs.

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My buck field dressed at 144#. We got 72# of meat from it. My husband's buck weighed 162# which produced 86# of meat. Our son's button buck weighed 72# and produced 29# of meat. Right around 50% yield on all 3 on them.

We do our own butchering and are very, very picky. We keep bone-in neck roasts and ribs. Everything else is 99% lean, red meat.

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Mine was 110 lbs field dressed hanging. I ended up with 24 lbs of red boneless meat for sausage and The backstraps and tenderloins that I didn't weigh guessing I'd say 10 lbs or less. I do not keep any neck or rib meat and am very picky about front shoulders.

Ferny.

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My buck dressed 220 lbs this year. After I took the steaks and roasts I still got over 60 pounds of grind (much of what was neck meat). I think a 40-45% return is accurate.

A large "gun season" hide could weigh around 15 pounds with some fat, meat and fluid still attached. And the head can be another 10 plus on a big deer.

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Our group of 12 harvested 9 deer this year and each guy got a share of 48 pounds. That comes out to an average of 64 pounds of meat per deer. 7 of 9 were bucks, most of those 2 year olds but one old buck that went 209 field dressed. I would guess that somewhere around 40% is pretty accurate assuming that you aren't turning the shoulders into burger with a slug.

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This might be the most vague amount, but I ended up getting about 65 ponds of meat out of my buck. Was a big 2.5 year old that may have been bigger than I thought. I would have guessed it as around 180 pounds but may have been bigger. I was surprised how much meat I ended up getting out of him. Unfortunately when your the only one who eats venison in your family it goes a long ways. Would like to still be hunting but would feel like a waste of an animal if I shot another.

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Same here on the hunting part. Shot one deer and it was enough meat for the year for me. Would of liked to deer hunt more,but could not justify shooting another deer I did not need it,and just killing or harvesting for the pleasure of shooting it.

That 30-40% on edible meat really seems consistent from everybodies reports.

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61 pounds of red meat from my buck. Guessed him at about 170-175. 16 pounds of trim from the neck! smile 42 pounds of trim to grind for jerky and burgers, maybe a little sausage this year(getting spendy to have it made) and 19 pounds of steaks. I usually end up in the 35% range cuz 99% of the white is in the garbage. I'm sure a butcher shop would get more trim but I enjoy it as red as possible. And I still don't mind the time it takes to do it. Part of the memory for me. In high school one of the neighbor girls always said we had the garage of death. lol butchered 2 last week and 2 more getting done this week.

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