One thing I can say at 57 years old I do things basically the same as my dad taught me. But I now do them with WAY more attention to detail than dad did. In fact, my dad pretty much let me have the chore of butchering (anything) after I got to about 17. But he (for some unknow reason) stopped hunting deer in his 50s, he never let on why. He was a WELL know deer hunter in south Texas *who COULD shoot a deer at 400 on the run- in the heart* as he was born and raised on the ranch until the age of 35 (and was a sheep rancher, so the coyotes kept him very sharp behind his gun). But I guess golf was less messy and more fun and he had me to do it- so I did!
With my background here I gutted many hundreds of deer (mine and others I helped out with over years when I guided on our ranches for our friends and families we let hunt). I also butchered goats, sheep, and a few steers and tons of rabbits, squirrels and birds too.
In all these years with all these animals going across my butchering boards (back of trucks, fallen piece of barn wood, cleaner rocks), I HAVE learned a lot of tricks on my own. I'm taking about small stuff (i.e. pulling a vein group off the side of a ham without taking a lot of meat- free hand). What used to take 5 minutes, now take 15 seconds (always with a VERY sharp knife). Yes, I've also learned over the years to keep a steel nearby and keep the Hinkle's sharpened in the block (I sharpen my knives about once a week year round- when just using them lightly off season too). I always take TWO knifes to help gut a deer too. *I cut my fingers WAY less that I did in my 20s- some years a small "nick" but no stitches needed.
Anyway... the point I'm trying to make is that I have enjoyed the process of all this over my lifetime. I cook almost every day (no restaurant in town) and my wife and I stay in shape and have an excellent diet. We both lived in cities (met in Austin in 2001) and I always "went hunting" a few times a year. Our ranches were sold off back in the 90s so I wasn't gone much then to hunt like I was (AT the ranch) growing up. But when we moved to our small town in Kansas, it all came together. Deer are plentiful, I live in the middle of a federal wildlife refuge full of ducks and geese. We have turkey and quail and a few rabbits too.
Thankfully I have a home with kitchen space to take care of most tasks. Still I have an older "church table" I pull out outside when I skin and quarter a hanging deer (using a larger folding ladder- I can tie a 200 lb deer to the ladder laying down, then pull it up using the ladder for leverage (ha, another trick!). My $150 grinder from Northern tool has ground 1000 lbs in 8 years if not more. Sausage stuffer was a dream come true-- now I can make sausage in 5 hours Vs 8 hours (but I don't get that great upper body "workout" balancing my 215 lbs on top of a damn stuffer... for hours
I'm just telling my story here while trying to toss in some basic, yet helpful ideas to our younger guys starting out. I've already gotten some great tips from MANY of you guys posting here- so thank you all- and keep them coming!