Coach529
Lil-Rokslider
I do with upland birds, but only if it is hot out. Pull the guts, throw some ice in the cavity and toss in a cooler. I finish the rest at home.
I do the same thing, and it's really as simple as hanging the birds by their heads/necks somewhere with good airflow, out of the elements/sun, and where temperatures are young to be between 35-45°F.Tell me more about this?
Curious about this. When it's cold later in the season I've hung whole birds in my carport for a couple days before plucking and it seemed to help with the feathers a little. When you say 7-10 days, is this only below certain ambient temps? Or do you have a walk in cooler you're keeping them in?I don't. Never had a problem.
When it comes to ducks, I especially don't gut them because I age them whole for 7-10 days. If you gut them, you ask for more bacteria to be introduced. The meat is totally different and most any gamey taste is gone.
The temp range is in my post, 35-45°F (minus the autocorrect typo). Those birds were in an uninsulated shed until about an hour ago when I finished processing them.Curious about this. When it's cold later in the season I've hung whole birds in my carport for a couple days before plucking and it seemed to help with the feathers a little. When you say 7-10 days, is this only below certain ambient temps? Or do you have a walk in cooler you're keeping them in?
Yep.So guts still in there, shot still in them, never even pulled a feather?
Pretty easy to clean them in the field and not leave a mess in the parking lot.Already ran into a couple parking lot cleaners this year. Take them back to where ever and quit being pigs leaving a mess in the parking areas. It’s cold enough here there is absolutely no good reason to do it
It is but I can go to every parking lot right now and looks like a bomb went off.Pretty easy to clean them in the field and not leave a mess in the parking lot.
On the flip side, why take something biodegradable, put it ins a plastic bag and dispose of it in a landfill.