For deer, just shoot a fawn and pull really hard. The hide, hind quarters, and front shoulders just pop right off!For deer, I've never felt the need to sharpen during, even with a mora. But you could do the same, keep your mora for the skinning and general work and carry a cheap lightweight, maybe even folding, fillet knife for the quartering and detail work. Basically a flexible boning knife, more similar to what you'd use in a butcher shop than a havalon / scalpel type anyway.
Just quartering, that's a fair point. In that case, I'd consider either a second knife or a small sharpener. Just a honing rod should be enough to touch it up as you go, same as a butcher would be using.For folks who are saying they get through a whole animal without sharpening their fixed blade, are they talking about quartering or boning out? There's gonna be a dozen miles and at least one mountain pass between me the truck. Thanks y'all
This would also be my approachHonestly packing that far in, I’m bringing a backup knife. Tyto with replaceable blades in the kill kit and then your fixed blade and you’ll be dialed in.
For folks who are saying they get through a whole animal without sharpening their fixed blade, are they talking about quartering or boning out? There's gonna be a dozen miles and at least one mountain pass between me the truck. Thanks y'all
This is exactly what I was thinking. For one deer it doesn’t even take 30 minutes to have it ready to pack out. If you’re dulling a good quality and sharp fixed blade on one deer you are making mistakes.
For folks who are saying they get through a whole animal without sharpening their fixed blade, are they talking about quartering or boning out? There's gonna be a dozen miles and at least one mountain pass between me the truck. Thanks y'all