Your persistence has paid off; your deer is down, now what do
you do? What you do now will determine the quality of your bucks
meat at the table. Proper care of your deer is very important in
making sure that its taste good when it is served at the table.
This article is to tell new hunters how to field dress, skin and
prepare a deer for butchering. Experienced hunters might also
learn something new.
False Hoods
One of the most
persistent beliefs among hunters is that you must bleed your
deer by cutting the deer's throat as soon as you get to it. This
is suppose to bleed the deer of blood and make the meat taste
better. Never cut a deer's throat. This has no positive effects.
Once a deer is dead the heart no longer pumps
blood. If the blood is not circulating then cutting the throat
will not bleed any blood from the deer. It can however mess up a
cape (the deer's hide around the head, neck and shoulders) if
you decide to mount the deer. It opens the deer's up to dirt in
an area that would otherwise have been protected from dirt and
bacteria. It is in a word "USELESS.".
If you want to bleed your deer you will first need to hang the
deer (best done head down) and then make a cut at the lowest
point so that the blood can gravity feed out of the deer. I
don't do this myself. I get the blood out of the deer after the
deer is home via soaking the meat in an ice chest for a few
days. This has the added benefit of ageing the meat a bit before
it is frozen.
Another fallacy is that you must cut off the tarsal glands of
the deer or the meat in that area will be ruined. This is
nonsense. It didn't taint the meat while the deer was living and
it will not taint it after the deer is dead. You don't want to
touch the tarsal gland and then touch the meat however. If the
animal is not yet dead, simply shoot the animal again. It is
very dangerous to approach a buck that is wounded from the front
and down right stupid to try to cut its throat with a knife.
FIELD
DRESSING
A sharp knife is
better than a dull knife when it comes to field dressing a buck.
A sharp knife will actually reduce bad (unneeded) cuts and will
make the entire procedure easier. Take your time when dressing a
buck, mistakes due to haste will often require you to make a
trip to the hospital to get stitches.
Prop the
animal on its back and begin field dressing by making acut from just above the
genitals up to the rib cage. You now haveto make a choice. Some people
cut through a number of the ribs inthe rib cage to make it easier
to reach up into the deer's chest.I find this unnecessary but
its up to you. If you do plan to cutthrough some of the ribs you
should do it off center to avoid thesternum. When you make this
cut from just above the genital to the sternum take care not to cut too
deep. You only want to cutthrough the hide and through
the animals stomach muscle only. If yougo to deep you will puncture
the deer's intestines and you willhave to deal with the smell.
NOTE: If
you plan on having the deer mounted don't cut any further up the
belly than the sternum to save the cape.
Now
turn the deer on its side and allow the guts to fall out.
They will require help from you by cutting away the fat that
will
hold the intestines in. This is usually at the top of the cavity
in the area near the spine. Care must be taken to not puncture
or break the deer's bladder. The bladder will be in the area
where the cavity narrows down at the hips. I leave this part of
the deer's intestines intact but many or most do not. If you
plan on removing all of this then you must have a very sharp
knife and must ream the deer out from the back. Cutting around
the anus and tying it off with string. Then cutting either
forwards or
backwards from the abdominal cavity to remove this entire area.
Easier said than done. Care must be take not to puncture
anything here this is where the deer droppings and urine are
located. The deer's abdominal cavity is separated from the chest
cavity by the diaphragm. This separates the lung and heart from
the stomach and intestines. This must be cut out to remove all
of the intestines.
This is how it usually works
for me, with the guts half in and
half out I cut the diaphragm away from the deer's chest cavity,
I then reach as far up into the deer's chest as possible and
grab the deer esophagus. With the other hand I carefully slide
the knife into the deer's chest and work my knife up into the
chest to cut the esophagus just above my other hand. After it is
cut I simply pull the heart and lungs out and with it comes the
rest of the intestines.
Wash up...
Drag the deer out....
Load in truck...
Go home or to camp for skinning...
SKINNING
When skinning a deer it can
either be hung head up or head down. I have always hung mine
head up. Begin by making a circular cut around the deer's neck.
Connect this cut with the cut made in the stomach during field
dressing. Remove the hide by grasping the skin and pulling down
hard with both hands. Use your knife carefully when freeing the
hide from the carcass to avoid cutting the skin. If the flesh
begins to pull off with the skin, stop pulling and try again
after cutting the flesh back with the knife.
NOTE: If the
cape is to be saved, you can cut the middle and rear portion of
the hide free by starting skinning just behind the shoulder and
working down from there.
When you have the hide down
around the shoulders you will have to cut off the front legs
with a hacksaw just above what you would think is the deer's
knees. Then on the inside of the deer's legs cut toward the
chest and connect this cut with the one made up through the
chest and abdomen during gutting. After you work the hide free
around the front legs with a knife. You can continue to work the
hide down the deer's back towards its feet and tail. Once you
get the hide down around the deer's tail, simply cut the tail
off with a knife. Let me say this again. When you are pulling
and cutting the hide from the deer and you can see that the hide
is now coming off of the tail, you can now simply cut the tail
free. This cut you understand is not through hide but only
through the tailbone itself because you have pulled the hide
down far enough so that it exposes the tailbone under the hide.
That's a long explanation for something simple just so you will
not get confused. Continue until you get the hide down around
the deer's tarsal glands (the dark patches on the inside of the
hind legs) then take a saw and cut through the leg just above
the tarsal gland.
By now you are tired from
unpacking, driving, getting up early
and dragging the deer out of the woods, skinning and gutting.
But you are not finished yet. You must still store the meat for
butchering. I will not go into great detail at least not today
but this is how I do it. I first cut out the back strap and
tenderloins out and place in an ice chest. Then I cut the front
legs free (no bones to cut) and place them in an ice chest. Then
I cut the back hindquarters free with a knife. You can works a
hindquarter free with just a knife if you work your way to the
ball and socket joint that holds the hindquarters to the hips.
Just work the point into this joint and work around the ball.
Once both tendons are cut the
hindquarter will be free. Place any other meat such as ribs and
neck into the ice chest. Now place a bunch of ice in the ice
chest with the meat. I am now totally exhausted from all the
work. So I am in no mood to begin butchering the deer. So I
usually wait a couple of days before I begin butchering.
Each day you need to drain the
water and add new ice. I usually will do a little butchering
each day until I am finished, this usually takes me 5 to 7 days.
I could do it all in one day if I wanted to but cutting up one
hindquarter is easy but butchering an entire deer is work so I
spread it out.