Coolers

fracguy

FNG
Joined
Jul 18, 2025
Messages
16
So I am heading out for an early season hunt and been beating my head off the wall for an efficient way to get meat cooled off. I bought a couple coolers for a total of 230qts worth. Started building my own cooler but the price of the foam board was the price of a cooler plus I was going to fiberglass the outside and yeah, changed my mind. So was cruising Facebook marketplace and found a cheat freezer for free that works just old. It's a little bigger than the cooler I was making at 41x32x22, my cooler was 4ft x 2ft x 2ft. Gonna stash it in front of my wheeler in the back of my truck and have a small generator that I'm taking with me so IF I do get an elk I can put it in there and not worry about getting ice. Gonna freeze up a few milk jugs and put in it and see how long they stay frozen, my hopes is that I can put a dozen frozen milk jugs in it to keep it cold for the time I'm there and if I get an elk it will already be cold and just fire up the generator and go back in and break camp down and not have to hurry. Anyone else haul a freezer instead of coolers?
 
Yep, one freezer vs multiple big coolers frees up a lot of space in my rig. I usually haul mine under my truck topper, but it’s impossible to load unless I slide it onto the tailgate or take the screws out of the lid.

I would personally try to avoid freezing the elk meat prior to processing it. Hunt Backcountry Podcast had a meat scientist on episode 508 that explains why very thoroughly. There is some priceless information in this episode.


If you choose to avoid freezing the meat, you could use a temperature controller to essentially turn the deep freeze into a refrigerator. This is what I do at home when I am in the middle of processing meat.

 
Oh yeah good call on the not freezing it, I do remember reading something about a shrinkage that happens, just woke up and can't think of what it's called. I never thought of using an inkbird, I have a spare I keep on hand for my aquarium. My first thought was I could put it on my tailgate behind wheeler but I'd have to load and unload it and being solo I could do it but don't want to so I'll put it in front of wheeler and generator next to it. I think I may build a box for it to sit in that is water proof and sealed and a spot for genny to go next to it so it's all 1 unit and weather won't bother it
 
Yep, we haul 4 freezers, one is full of frozen meals. Others just get filed with just stuff for the drive out.
The drive is 2200 miles one way, everything stays frozen. 4 years ago, we killed 7 bulls and one cow. We butcher while at camp. That year all 4 freezers were full of elk meat coming home. Last year we killed 4 bulls, not sure how we would keep all the meet from going bad if we just had coolers.
 
We used small freezers many times. They work great. The only problem we had was that someone tried to steal one off the trailor. My friends Dad heard the commotion and went out to the parking lot at the motel. Two kids doing there best to get it, he yelled and they took of. His Dad came in laughing about it. Said the cooler was locked and had strips of steel through the base bolted to the trailor to hold it in place. Wasn't even a big game hunt, we were on our way to Arkansas to hunt ducks for a week.
 
Freezer works really well for the early hunts...Sheep up north starts July 15 or Aug 1 depending on the province/territory. Caribou and moose mid-Aug. Down south I shot a CA Tule elk Aug 1 in 98*F heat. And some elk bow seasons open Sept 1. All can be in warm summer conditions.

I've got a little 5 cf chest freezer (deer, sheep, caribou and elk that I've vacuum packed all the red meat) and a larger about 12 cf chest freezer (moose or multiples of other critters). My little Honda EU1000i will run either one. I keep the freezer under the canopy on the F150 and ratchet strap the Honda generator on a little heavy plywood platform I built on top of a 2"x 2" x (1/4" wall) x 18" long square tube that fits the receiver hitch.
 
We used small freezers many times. They work great. The only problem we had was that someone tried to steal one off the trailor. My friends Dad heard the commotion and went out to the parking lot at the motel. Two kids doing there best to get it, he yelled and they took of. His Dad came in laughing about it. Said the cooler was locked and had strips of steel through the base bolted to the trailor to hold it in place. Wasn't even a big game hunt, we were on our way to Arkansas to hunt ducks for a week.
That's my only worry is someone trying to steal it. I'll be 10 miles back in on 4 wheeler camping and truck will be unattended. Went on a hunt with my dad around 15 years ago when he drew a tag on the forbes trinchera ranch in Colorado, we had a brand new chainsaw stolen and a set of 4 wheeler ramps stolen from our camp. I may fold up the rear seat in my truck and try putting it in my truck.
 
Run your generator for a little bit when you are back at camp to keep your ice/jugs frozen. I load up the freezer with ice and bring a good size cooler for drinks and food. I’ve nice having fresh bags of ice on command
 
Run your generator for a little bit when you are back at camp to keep your ice/jugs frozen. I load up the freezer with ice and bring a good size cooler for drinks and food. I’ve nice having fresh bags of ice on command
Ill be quite a ways from my truck, where I want to go would be unfeasible to go back to truck every night. It's almost an hour and half 4 wheeler ride back in so I'm camping off my wheeler. Kind of thinking about freezing a bunch of milk jugs and filling it full of frozen jugs to keep it cool. If I get an elk I can always cut the jugs apart and take them without the ice or put them in my truck and take them home. Not sure how long a dozen jugs would stay frozen. I should actually get a couple cases of water and freeze them and see
 
That's my only worry is someone trying to steal it. I'll be 10 miles back in on 4 wheeler camping and truck will be unattended. Went on a hunt with my dad around 15 years ago when he drew a tag on the forbes trinchera ranch in Colorado, we had a brand new chainsaw stolen and a set of 4 wheeler ramps stolen from our camp. I may fold up the rear seat in my truck and try putting it in my truck.
Bolting it down has worked for us. Some guys we met in SD had their freezer broken into at a motel and they lost a lot of venison. Maybe a cable lock around the lid wouldn't be a bad idea. Shame people do stuff like that. I hate theives!
 
Bolting it down has worked for us. Some guys we met in SD had their freezer broken into at a motel and they lost a lot of venison. Maybe a cable lock around the lid wouldn't be a bad idea. Shame people do stuff like that. I hate thieves!
Couldn't agree more. I think I'm gonna bolt it down to some angle iron and weld up a couple eyelets that line up with the ones in the bed of my truck and get a couple locks. I really hate to think of that because a lock only keeps an honest person honest, if someone wants something bad enough, they will get it and it's a matter of what they destroy to get it. Lesson learned with car radios and subwoofers back in the day. I mean a battery powered angle grinder will remove any lock I have encountered and hell most people have one now.
 
Couldn't agree more. I think I'm gonna bolt it down to some angle iron and weld up a couple eyelets that line up with the ones in the bed of my truck and get a couple locks. I really hate to think of that because a lock only keeps an honest person honest, if someone wants something bad enough, they will get it and it's a matter of what they destroy to get it. Lesson learned with car radios and subwoofers back in the day. I mean a battery powered angle grinder will remove any lock I have encountered and hell most people have one now.
I welded locking straps around the big metal box we take with us. The generator, chain saw, other things like that go in it. I made it out of 1/8" cold rolled with 1" angle iron exterior frame. 3 foot deep, 3 foot high, 5 feet wide. Hinges are welded on. Its also bolted down to the trailor. Like you said, locks only keep honest folks out. One clasp and two locking straps might be over kill but three locks are better than one. You can get multiple Masterlocks that are keyed alike at Ace Hardware. Get multiple keys made, someone will lose a key. Don't ask!
 
Walmart coleman 150qt. from walmart. Lightweight, fits a lot of gear inside of it, cheap enough it has less chance of being stolen than a Yeti
 
Lol I read your other one when I was half asleep this morning and was like how the heck is he getting an elk in a 65qt and went back to sleep and had a dream about stuffing a full elk in my little camping cooler going well he did it so I should be able to as well 🤣
 
Lol I read your other one when I was half asleep this morning and was like how the heck is he getting an elk in a 65qt and went back to sleep and had a dream about stuffing a full elk in my little camping cooler going well he did it so I should be able to as well 🤣
Ive never shot an elk before but I have gone out with a tiny 40 quart cooler thinking I could just buy a bigger cooler if I get one.

I started thinking about it if it's late nothing's open and I let an elk spoil just because I was not prepared is something I can't live with.

Heading out with frozen jugs, better luck and a bigger cooler!
 
Ive never shot an elk before but I have gone out with a tiny 40 quart cooler thinking I could just buy a bigger cooler if I get one.

I started thinking about it if it's late nothing's open and I let an elk spoil just because I was not prepared is something I can't live with.

Heading out with frozen jugs, better luck and a bigger cooler!
That was my original thought, oh I can just go get one and like you said, nothing is open if it's late and I'll be every bit of 4 hours from town. Saving all my milk jugs to freeze and keep in my freezer so it stays somewhat cold hopefully so if I do happen to get one I'll just fire genny up and make sure it stays cold but not frozen on way home.
 
Something My brother does while fishing. Which would work hunting also
He uses one of the small chest freezers to transport live bait in. Lake is 4+ hours away and vs buying bait he uses a freezer to haul it to the lake. Works well to keep bait alive since its insulated.

Once at the lake the bait goes in a livebox that stays in the water. He then plugs the freezer in at camp and when fish are cleaned he freezes them right there.

Would work the same way just to keep cut up meat cool.
Ill be doing it on a trip to a buddies house this year in FL. Plan to take about 4 deer and its a 12 hour drive. So vs buy coolers ill just get a freezer to put them quartered up in to keep them cool.
 
Back
Top