Disassembling A Deer

JMP

New member
pretty impressive

My wife does all the dirty work for me and prides herself on her speed. Two years ago I timed her in the field and gutted from esophagus to anus, and skinned - eight minutes six seconds. We've timed her a few times and that was her best. When she's not rushing it's still only about double that. I have to cut the legs and head off though - she hates the sound of sawing bone.

It really is nice doing all that in the field and coming home with just meat.

When my dad was still alive, she showed a lot of interest in that part of the hunt so he spent time teaching her and bought her her own knives. She uses Knives of Alaska and they are worth every penny in my opinion. I've bought her a few more because whatever they cost, they're worth it for the work I get out of.

Aaaaand..... she's a vegetarian.
 

.284

New member
Seen that already.......that guy is freak'in amazing.

My best in the field is 3:57 as timed by my son.......but that's just gutted.
 

huntinaz

New member
Damn. Takes all the fun out of it!

Of course, it may very well be extremely fun to get it done in 2 minutes. I will never know:D
 
You can bet that was a pen'ed up freshly killed animal. Take notice no hole/s seen or blood shot areas. Being a farmed raised animal no cold weather hide to deal with. I couldn't do that type of skinning & gutting even if I wanted too. I field dress mine on the ground first thing. Then worry about its hide removal later. But I have to give credit to the young man. No doubt about it. He is fast.
 

shortwave

New member
I'd say that this fella has been around the block a time or ten when it comes to skinning/gutting. Bet he can work one up just as well.

I field dress mine on the ground first thing

Same here S.S.

Scavengers gotta eat too. ;)
 

Art Eatman

Staff in Memoriam
Early on in the film, looking down toward the shoulder area after the hide is peeled back, it looks like the deer was shot in or near a shoulder. Sorta messy at the base of the neck and behind it.
 

shortwave

New member
Early on in the film, looking down toward the shoulder area after the hide is peeled back, it looks like the deer was shot in or near a shoulder.

Yes, on the right side shoulder as you're watching the film.
 
Na!! You guys are seeing things. I'm turning my Bifocals upside-down for a better look see.> Aah!! He just scalped it a litt'l too close is all._:D
 

shortwave

New member
S.S.

How the heck did you ever make that beautiful 150yd shot on that big doe this year and can't see the hole in the deer on your computer screen? :p:D
 
Oh there. Yea!! That 22 hole. My mistake. Here I thought that was a Georgia Gnat bite y'all._:eek:

Come on shortwave. You know that shot I made on that doe was_"Luck of the Irish"_:D
 

Panfisher

New member
It would take me more than a 1 minute and 48 seconds to count the cuts in my fingers if I tried that method at that speed. Methinks that not he first time in a skinning room.:rolleyes:
 

shortwave

New member
Come on shortwave. You know that shot I made on that doe was_"Luck of the Irish

I seriously doubt luck had anything to do with it SS.

Now... you mighta celebrated with some Irish 'liquid' whilst you was standin beside that doe in the pic. thinkin how good those tenderloins were gonna taste.:D

It would take me more than a 1 minute and 48 seconds to count the cuts in my fingers if I tried that method at that speed.

I'm with ya on that one Panfisher.
I would have probably thrown my back out when I tossed the guts into the barrel like he did. :eek:

Anyone know why he made the two incisions halfway down between the ribs towards the end of the clip? Maybe for hangin in future processing??
 
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.284

New member
I did notice that he threw the flank steaks off that fresh kill right in the trash.......boys and girls, that's burger.

Did you notice the steam?....that was fresh.
 
[QUOTE Now... you mighta celebrated with some Irish 'liquid' whilst you was standin beside that doe in the pic QUOTE] No!! too cold that morning for any warmer-upper's Sir. Needed to get my deer skinned & quartered as quick as possible. As she was the second deer hung on that same gamble skinned & quartered by me that morning.
But I did have a bit of Jameson along for medicinal purposes that never made the trip back home with me._;)
As far as her tender loins. There long gone Sir. I fried them up with our eggs every morning and once with the two hearts we had. Gee's all of it was so good. :)
 

.284

New member
Did you notice the steam?....that was fresh
.

Wow, I'm a smart one..........it better be fresh it still had the guts in it.

Does anyone else think that's weird? I have never gutted a deer indoors and most of the time I getter did right where they lay.
 

shortwave

New member
[But I did have a bit of Jameson along for medicinal purposes that never made the trip back home with me._
/QUOTE]

Always good to have a properly stocked medical kit with ya at camp. ;)

As far as her tender loins. There long gone Sir. I fried them up with our eggs every morning and once with the two hearts we had

Eggs ,deer tenderloin and heart for breakfast... a day spent hunting afield and time spent in the evening amongst those that mean something to ya along with a nip of Jameson to warm ya up ...sounds like you have it goin on and are livin the dream. Glad for ya.

Does anyone else think that's weird? I have never gutted a deer indoors and most of the time I getter did right where they lay

I gut my deer in the field as well. But if a guy was set up to kill a deer, had an ATV to drag deer out(I'm not dragging a gut filled deer by hand anywhere) and immediately start processing, I don't see anything weird about it. I've considered doing the same thing with deer shot here at the house but haven't yet. Guess old habits are hard to break. :rolleyes:
 

cnimrod

New member
dang

Anyone else cringe thinking he was gonna cut his fingers off without even knowing it.


I have taken to hanging my deer by the hind legs to field dress it- saves the back and gravity helps a lot.

Good luck all
C
 
My father did his butchering the same way as seen here. Me?_ I went another way just to be different. I hung mine by their head. Did a few in front of my Dear Ol' Daddy while daddy was shaking head in disappointment and saying_" Your learn Sonny or >worse!!"_ As I recall by the time I got their hide down past its hams there was so much hair to pick off those hams it looked like the animal developed a second hide while hanging on that gamble. Spent more time picking hair then actually skinning or the gutting time combined.
Last years skinning technique was the "Golf Ball Pull." I believe that 454 in my chevy was a bit too much engine for that de-hidding exercise. {it tore both front shoulders off my Y buck} This year I'm back doing it the way the Ol' Man taught me. (Simple but effective.) _"50 years later Yup!! I've learned pops."

One tip I'll pass to others: When making knife cuts on the hide. Make your cuts from the under-side of the hide outwards. Reason too: Cuts down on the amount of loose hair that somehow ends up all over the animals meat and its butcher also.
 
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