TNKnoxville
WKR
Heading to CO for 3rd season elk and mule deer. Looking for a mature mule deer buck. Question is how is the meat.???? I've heard both good and very gamey. My family loves whitetail, bear and elk. Never had any mule deer???????????
Mule deer isn't my favorite...more sagey tasting than gamey in IMO. I have never had moose but I would rank the big game that I have tasted in the following order:
1. Elk
2. Axis (VERY close 2nd)
3. Whitetail
4. Pronghorn - Gamier than mule deer but I like gamey, almost like lamb IMO
5. Mule Deer
Yeah good point on the feed, the mule deer I have had were low country prairie not high country.Here ya go. I’ve never had a “sagey” mule deer. Probably depends on their main source of feed.
Thanks, looks like I'll bring it home if I'm successful!!!!!! A actually don't mind sage. My wife does not!
I think you are 100% correct. Imo, the only way to consistently have quality wild game is to process it yourself.In 2018 I shot a pre-rut MT mule deer living in the sage country. He had 1.5" of fat on his rump and was in very good condition. Then in December I shot a KS mule deer living in the grass/sage country. He was post-rut and skin and bones, hide almost dragging the ground and no fat at all. Surprisingly both tasted great. Both deer were in pieces within an hour of being shot, both were cooled immediately, and both were meticulously processed for the freezer. I'm starting to believe that the care of the meat matters more than the quality of the meat going in, as counter-intuitive as that may seem.