Got it. This buck wasn't in a good spot to get the second strap off but I'll give it another go on some antelope later this year.
When you flip it is the back or belly the down side? I flip it with the back being the part that rolls across the ground, unless the skinned hide is overlapped it seems like the skinned section of the spine is getting some ground contact. I found I needed to watch out for that when I tried it out this way where as when I skin from the belly as I normally do (and then remove all the meat exactly as you do) that isn't a concern at all since its rolling over with an intact hide under the spine area. Just trying to feel out this method more.
5milesback... why do you case skin the legs? Trying to limit hair on the meat?
Since all the meat is now removed from the "skinned" side, it doesn't matter if it comes into contact with the ground and I don't worry about it. Everything on the other side of the spine is still covered with skin
What do you mean "case skin"?
What do you mean "case skin"?
Tube skin you called it. Case skin I guess is a trapping term, but same thing.
I've never understood why anyone leaves the bones in (unless you're just dead set on certain bone in cuts). You can have it deboned and in bags faster than gutting and dragging it 100 yards. Nothing deer size or smaller has ever taken me more than an hour to fully bone out on the ground, and that includes sneaking in the backside for tenderloins and sometimes cutting in the liver side to get liver and heart.If your gutting it then start at the gut incision but why waist the time gutting? I prefer to start my skinning from the belly as the quarters just seem to come off easier then when working from the back but if its a big elk that drops straight down I don't expend the energy trying to turn it over and just work from the back down.
I for the life of me can't figure out why anyone would gut an animal first if there doing to quarter it, get the skin and quarters off as soon as possible then if you want any of the guts open them up and get what you want. Way less mess and hassle getting the meat off first.
I also can't figure out why anyone would drag a deer or elk much over 100 yards, in the time it takes to drag something out and fight with logs and rocks I can have the animal skinned, quartered and packed out plus you have to cut it up somewhere so why not in the field were the mess can be left right there.
I've never understood why anyone leaves the bones in (unless you're just dead set on certain bone in cuts). You can have it deboned and in bags faster than gutting and dragging it 100 yards. Nothing deer size or smaller has ever taken me more than an hour to fully bone out on the ground, and that includes sneaking in the backside for tenderloins and sometimes cutting in the liver side to get liver and heart.
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Good bags hold a shape well enough and breathe. I can confidently say deboned meat in a good bag cools way faster than meat sitting on a hot bone. But I could definitely see the advantage if you're gonna stay out there for a while. Definitely would lose a lot more crusted meat if you have it chunked off the bone, thereby significantly increasing surface area.I always leave the bone in, much easier to deal with quarters and I much prefer ribs (moose), on the bone. I have boned out some game in the field, one sheep and a goat, but I’d rather leave the bone in for convenience sake, especially if I’m going to be in the field for upwards of a week after the kill, and moving the meat around a lot. It’s also much easier to keep clean if you’re going to be pulling it out of the game bags to hang, and to allow air to get to it for a good crust to form.
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I'm normally solo and I start at the tail and make a cut all the way to the base of the antlers. Then I skin one side down and debone it all. Then I flip it over and do the same on the other side. Then I reach in and remove the tenderloins on both sides. If I want the cape, it's already half done so I can easily finish that out. Never need to cut them open. But if you wanted to get the heart and liver, it's a lot easier now anyway.
This is exactly what I do.