1st year Elk hunt, cooler size?

Learn from me and don’t pack out bones! Debone and you can fit an elk in not all that much cooler space.

Fill the coolers the the brim with one gallon jugs. Pour some water out and freeze them. Have the ice jugs take up as much space in the coolers as possible. Then just leave 2 or 3 jugs in the cooler to keep the meat cold, set the rest to the side somewhere. The cooler will already be very cold and unless you are traveling very far, the meat will stay cool and dry.

You can re-use the ice jugs for other hunts and year to year.
 
Good ol annual cooler thread. Take it for what it’s worth me being 0-4 now but the good old stand by igloo 120 is hard to beat plus it can act as storage if it doesn’t get used
 
My first and only elk was an adolescent bull 2x4. Bone in It took a 145QT RTIC a 65QT RTIC and a 48QT Coleman (Just what I had). There was room for ice and bone in meat. Drove it from WY to SW Florida in 3 days with zero spoilage. Drained and re-iced coolers daily.

This time I will be flying in to the same area. As always I will bring by 120qt coleman as checked baggage loaded with gear and my weapon as the second checked bag (Bow this year). Plan to purchase a second 150QT coleman and keep it in the cab of the truck. If I don't tag out I will return it. I will fill my 150QT with as many blocks of ice as I can fit and loose ice in between, duct tape it shut and not open it unless I tag out.

If I do tag out, all meat will get hung and cooled. I will split the ice between the 2 coolers. Debone the meat, bag in 2 gallon ziplocks labeled and keep them on ice. The day before my flight I will empty and dry the coolers, lay the meat on the bottom, cover the meat with a layer or two of reflectix and top cooler off with dry ice. Morning of the flight I ensure all dry ice is emptied, cooler is relatively dry inside and it will get duct taped shut.

Coolers can weigh no more than 100lb each total, so that is roughly 85-90lb of meat per cooler. I may need to purchase a smaller 3rd cooler depending on size of the elk. Can get a soft sided cooler and use as carry on/personal item.
 
It's also fair to note that cooling type affects "effective capacity" in a cooler. You need a lot less physical volume of dry ice than water-ice. But bear in mind when shipping by air, AFAIK all air carriers require you to disclose that you have dry ice in the container, and the container cannot be sealed. You need to provide a ventilation hole or breather tube so the CO2 can escape.
 
It's also fair to note that cooling type affects "effective capacity" in a cooler. You need a lot less physical volume of dry ice than water-ice. But bear in mind when shipping by air, AFAIK all air carriers require you to disclose that you have dry ice in the container, and the container cannot be sealed. You need to provide a ventilation hole or breather tube so the CO2 can escape.
IF i recall, Delta does not allow dry ice at all. There are at the very least quantity limits.

With that said, I have used dry ice to freeze meat in a cooler, then removed remaining dry ice, packed the cooler with the frozen meat and sleeping bag/clothes and gotten home with still frozen meat. Much simpler that way, but just be sure to seal any openings in the cooler and bag meat so it doesnt leak
 
IF i recall, Delta does not allow dry ice at all. There are at the very least quantity limits.

With that said, I have used dry ice to freeze meat in a cooler, then removed remaining dry ice, packed the cooler with the frozen meat and sleeping bag/clothes and gotten home with still frozen meat. Much simpler that way, but just be sure to seal any openings in the cooler and bag meat so it doesnt leak
They do allow it, but in very limited quantities. Details here. https://www.delta.com/us/en/baggage/prohibited-or-restricted-items/food-alcohol-transportation It's good advice to check first because every airline is different.
 
Back
Top