Bubblehide
WKR
- Joined
- May 13, 2015
- Messages
- 3,931
Filling the pick-up bed with fresh corn works very well. They just jump in on their own.
Second that. Easy as pie. No fancy winches, nothing expensive.I keep a bed length piece of 3/4 plywood at least 36" wide in the bed. I used to pull the deer up the ramp and inside with a rope, but it is easier to pull the deer on the ramp and then lift the ramp and slide the ramp in with the deer on it, that way you don't have to do something with the plywood. A block and tackle in the truck attached to the plywood ramp would be mighty useful to pull the deer and ramp in at the same time, I'm not there yet as far as needing that.
Smaller ramps like a pair of 2 x 12's just cause a lot of trouble.
that's what I've done. Slow but pretty easy on the back, and of course try to get the tailgate lower (wheels in a rut, back against a bank, anything but full height)Come-along?
This is the best wayI tie a rope around the back legs, get in the bed and pull the up as high as I can tie that off to something, do it again with the front legs, and then push it up the rest of the way. It's really easy.
i like this method
Quarter it up and put it in meat bagsReal problem. I’m no spring chicken.
When you’re hunting solo — any tips, tricks, or DIY setups to get deer into the pickup truck without the throwing out your back (or worse?)
I got it done this time but it wasn’t pretty and I’m still sore 2 days later!
Thanks Roksliders!
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