Swede
WKR
I have field butchered elk bone in and bone out. I can find no difference in the texture or flavor of the meat. There is some of both in the freezer now. I have to look at the date on the package to know which is which.
Sometimes I take a tarp with me to lay the meat on. If insects are not a problem, the old bed sheet or tarp can be good. When field butchering alone, a game bag goes over the skinned hams and shoulders before they are detached from the carcass. That keeps them very clean. Other meat is detached from the skeleton and placed into bags before it touches the ground.
I take all meat to a cold storage locker within a day. Cooling is no problem with either the bone in or bone out method. I have killed elk when the temperatures go well up into the 80s. A hunter just needs to get their meat butchered and cooled somewhere.
Sometimes I take a tarp with me to lay the meat on. If insects are not a problem, the old bed sheet or tarp can be good. When field butchering alone, a game bag goes over the skinned hams and shoulders before they are detached from the carcass. That keeps them very clean. Other meat is detached from the skeleton and placed into bags before it touches the ground.
I take all meat to a cold storage locker within a day. Cooling is no problem with either the bone in or bone out method. I have killed elk when the temperatures go well up into the 80s. A hunter just needs to get their meat butchered and cooled somewhere.