Interesting. Did you field dress it yourself? Or did you use an outfitter? Myself and my partners have taken boatloads of elk there for the past 12 years. It doesn’t smell any different than any other processor. As far as hair….. part of that responsibility weighs on the hunter. If you debone meat and bring it chunked there are literally thousands of little places for a hair to hide.I brought my bison to Matt's and the work quality was absolutely horrible. Hair and gristle in many of my burger packs. By far the worst experience I have had with a butcher. The shop is very dirty and smells of spoiled blood that has not been cleaned in a long time if ever.
Interesting. Did you field dress it yourself? Or did you use an outfitter? Myself and my partners have taken boatloads of elk there for the past 12 years. It doesn’t smell any different than any other processor. As far as hair….. part of that responsibility weighs on the hunter. If you debone meat and bring it chunked there are literally thousands of little places for a hair to hide.
I’m picky about my meat. One or two hairs and I won’t use that processor again. BUT… I do my part. I don’t debone my meat. I don’t even remove the hide before packing it out of the hills. Instead, I bust my ass to take whole unskinned quarters back to base camp. Once I’m there I hang them from a tree and skin them where no grass, dirt, or anything can touch the meat. Inevitably a little bit of hair will find its way to the meat. So after that, I set it on a contractor bag on the tailgate of my truck for as long as it takes, and I pick every single solitary hair off of every quarter and every backstrap. Then I bag it. When my meat gets to the processor , it is 100% hair and dirt free still on the bone to be hung the way a processor prefers it. Not a bunch of loose meat that can’t be hung and properly cared for. If I get a hair, it came from someone else. That would piss me off. But it’s never happened. I would highly recommend Matt’s Meats to anyone. My friends who live around Jackson and Alpine use them as well.
I’ve seen some elk and deer come there in the back of outfitter trucks that I would have been embarrassed to bring to a processor.
My bison went there freshly field dressed whole in the back of my truck. They skinned it and proceeded to ruin the meat. It’s a bummer because I was planning to give most to family and friends but it was so disgusting I would never do that. Tried to get ahold of “Matt” and someone whom I presume is his wife said he was never available the multiple times i called. I have some pictures of a particularly hair infested pack of ground I got back from them that I will try to find and post for the benefit of anyone considering dropping their animal here.Interesting. Did you field dress it yourself? Or did you use an outfitter? Myself and my partners have taken boatloads of elk there for the past 12 years. It doesn’t smell any different than any other processor. As far as hair….. part of that responsibility weighs on the hunter. If you debone meat and bring it chunked there are literally thousands of little places for a hair to hide.
I’m picky about my meat. One or two hairs and I won’t use that processor again. BUT… I do my part. I don’t debone my meat. I don’t even remove the hide before packing it out of the hills. Instead, I bust my ass to take whole unskinned quarters back to base camp. Once I’m there I hang them from a tree and skin them where no grass, dirt, or anything can touch the meat. Inevitably a little bit of hair will find its way to the meat. So after that, I set it on a contractor bag on the tailgate of my truck for as long as it takes, and I pick every single solitary hair off of every quarter and every backstrap. Then I bag it. When my meat gets to the processor , it is 100% hair and dirt free still on the bone to be hung the way a processor prefers it. Not a bunch of loose meat that can’t be hung and properly cared for. If I get a hair, it came from someone else. That would piss me off. But it’s never happened. I would highly recommend Matt’s Meats to anyone. My friends who live around Jackson and Alpine use them as well.
I’ve seen some elk and deer come there in the back of outfitter trucks that I would have been embarrassed to bring to a processor.