yycyak
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2018
- Messages
- 268
Hi guys, I have a dumb question.
TLDR: What's your "standard operating procedure" for both dealing with meat at the kill-site, as well as packing the meat back to your truck, when you are hunting solo?
I've got a solo elk hunt coming up in the next couple weeks. I've prepped, scouted, read everything I can get my hands on, talked to experienced guys who know the area, and now it's go-time. From the sounds of things, the area I'm hiking into should hopefully hold some elk, and if the gods are good and with a bit of extra luck, maybe I can down something.
In terms of dealing with the field processing, I've read up/watched Youtube a bunch on the gutless method, so I'm planning on doing that. However I realised that I don't specifically know what the "standard operating procedures" are for dealing with the meat once you have it in game bags at the kill site.
At the moment, I'm planning on doing the following:
(1) Process elk using gutless method, and put all the quarters/meat into game bags;
(2) A ways away (50m?) from the kill-site/carcass, build a simple temporary meat pole;
(3) Move/hang meat on temporary meat pole;
(4) Load a quarter into my pack, and hike it back to a meat pole close-ish to my spike camp;
(5) Hike back to kill site, grab another quarter, bring back to camp. Repeat x4;
(6) Hike quarters from camp back to truck;
Is this the right way to do things? Or would you skip bringing the meat to camp first, and just run relays back and forth between the kill-site and the truck?
My thought was the faster I can get things away from the kill-site/carcass (and by spending the least amount of time there) it'll be safer in terms of avoiding running into bears. (The unit I'm in has a fair number of grizz and black bears.)
Other details that may/may not matter:
- Hike from truck to spike camp is about 5km;
- Distance from spike camp to where I will be hunting is about 2km (uphill hike every morning);
- Spike camp is in a flat river valley with good visibility and good water;
If anyone has any critiques, or can offer a better/safer way to do things, I would certainly appreciate it.
TLDR: What's your "standard operating procedure" for both dealing with meat at the kill-site, as well as packing the meat back to your truck, when you are hunting solo?
I've got a solo elk hunt coming up in the next couple weeks. I've prepped, scouted, read everything I can get my hands on, talked to experienced guys who know the area, and now it's go-time. From the sounds of things, the area I'm hiking into should hopefully hold some elk, and if the gods are good and with a bit of extra luck, maybe I can down something.
In terms of dealing with the field processing, I've read up/watched Youtube a bunch on the gutless method, so I'm planning on doing that. However I realised that I don't specifically know what the "standard operating procedures" are for dealing with the meat once you have it in game bags at the kill site.
At the moment, I'm planning on doing the following:
(1) Process elk using gutless method, and put all the quarters/meat into game bags;
(2) A ways away (50m?) from the kill-site/carcass, build a simple temporary meat pole;
(3) Move/hang meat on temporary meat pole;
(4) Load a quarter into my pack, and hike it back to a meat pole close-ish to my spike camp;
(5) Hike back to kill site, grab another quarter, bring back to camp. Repeat x4;
(6) Hike quarters from camp back to truck;
Is this the right way to do things? Or would you skip bringing the meat to camp first, and just run relays back and forth between the kill-site and the truck?
My thought was the faster I can get things away from the kill-site/carcass (and by spending the least amount of time there) it'll be safer in terms of avoiding running into bears. (The unit I'm in has a fair number of grizz and black bears.)
Other details that may/may not matter:
- Hike from truck to spike camp is about 5km;
- Distance from spike camp to where I will be hunting is about 2km (uphill hike every morning);
- Spike camp is in a flat river valley with good visibility and good water;
If anyone has any critiques, or can offer a better/safer way to do things, I would certainly appreciate it.
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