So you can drag it out whole and hang the critter for aging and/or processing. I quarter most everything, but it sure is more pleasant to break an animal down when it's hanging in my barn vs. doing it on the ground in the dirt. If I'm close enough to the road I'll gut and drag vs quartering.... usually only happens with antelope and whitetail does.
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So you can drag it out whole and hang the critter for aging and/or processing. I quarter most everything, but it sure is more pleasant to break an animal down when it's hanging in my barn vs. doing it on the ground in the dirt. If I'm close enough to the road I'll gut and drag vs quartering.... usually only happens with antelope and whitetail does.
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so on a whitetail doe.. not saying this is right, I roll her over on her back Hide-on and remove both front shoulders then take my right foot and step on her left rear leg and remove right hind quarter, then remove left hind quarter, roll over on her legless body, now belly down, and split her hide down center of her back… I then remove both back straps and proceed to remove the inner loins from the topside of her ribs right at the spine… split both hinds between the bone and ligaments stick the hoof of each of front leg between the split of the rear and throw over shoulder…. Leaving hide on.. can age as is once home.. hide keeps dirt bugs and debris off.. once cured for 1-2 day , I then remove hide.. from quarters. It’s really easy and makes doing on ground for me is much more efficient than dragging all that other sh!t around.