Good point on the knives. I forgot that my main knife apparently hadn’t been fully cleaned before being put away so I ended up doing the entire job with a buck 135 paklite.Take the time to do a quality job. The butcher will appreciate it.
In my experience the number one factor slowing me down is dull blades. Do the cutting that dulls the blade last, or be aggressive about changing out blades.
I can do an entire deer with one Outdoors Edge blade, but if you're after speed then 2 or 3 might be better.
I did a whole elk with that little capper last year.. it’s quickly become my favorite knife. Takes to second to strop it back razor sharp. Weights nothingGood point on the knives. I forgot that my main knife apparently hadn’t been fully cleaned before being put away so I ended up doing the entire job with a buck 135 paklite.
I started using a separate knife for my dulling cuts. It is actually a very small folder that takes a standard utility knife blade. I make all of my hide cuts with that and then change to my another folder with a #60 blade for all of the meat cuts. You can get a lot of mileage out of blade if you only use it on meat and avoid grinding it into bone.Take the time to do a quality job. The butcher will appreciate it.
In my experience the number one factor slowing me down is dull blades. Do the cutting that dulls the blade last, or be aggressive about changing out blades.
I can do an entire deer with one Outdoors Edge blade, but if you're after speed then 2 or 3 might be better.
I started using a separate knife for my dulling cuts. It is actually a very small folder that takes a standard utility knife blade. I make all of my hide cuts with that and then change to my another folder with a #60 blade for all of the meat cuts. You can get a lot of mileage out of blade if you only use it on meat and avoid grinding it into bone.
Knuckling out the knee joints is super hard on an edge if you don't really take your time, which i don't. I took a doe a couple of weeks ago and cut all the leg bones above the knee with the UL saw i built for skull capping bucks in the backcountry. It takes a standard sawzall blade. A fine tooth blade performs very very well on bone. I think i'm done knuckling them out.
Haha I like it a lot myself also especially for the price. It’s my go to knife for birds and other small game.I just wish they made one that was double the blade length for the deeper cuts so I wouldn’t have to do multiple passes.I did a whole elk with that little capper last year.. it’s quickly become my favorite knife. Takes to second to strop it back razor sharp. Weights nothing
Yep, some things are worth waiting for. Good meat is part of the process. That carcass needed more cool air....I realize speed is the subject here. However the reason your worried about speed is because of temperature. Simply opening that animal up will begin the cooling process and allow you more time to be deliberate in the cuts. Next is hide removal. I only leave the hide on if I'm dragging it or if it's already below freezing Temps out.
I killed a deer Sunday in Iowa, it was mid 60s. Within 2 hours it was hanging and steam coming off it with hide removed. I really wanted to leave it overnight but I was leaving at 5am to drive 3 hrs back to work Monday and didn't want to deal with it early So I packed it in a cooler nearly whole. That morning i had to stop as it melted most my ice overnight. (Went in cooler way to warm still)
Lesson learned.