- Thread Starter
- #61
Marshfly
WKR
Sounds like some Indiana Jones type stuff but I'm doing that this year to try it.You just break the rib in the proper spot then reach in to get the heart?
Sounds like some Indiana Jones type stuff but I'm doing that this year to try it.You just break the rib in the proper spot then reach in to get the heart?
This is how I take care of animal as well. The only difference is that I take all the rib meat in one big piece as well as the whole flank. Roll the guts out and pull both tenderloins. Roll the animal over onto the stretched portion of the hide and repeat the skinning and quartering process. I also hand all meat on a game pole about 20 yds or so from the carcass. I let it cool out overnight and come back the next day for quarters. The backstraps, tenderloins, and other loose portions come out with me when I leave the rest to cool.I didn't realize it was a fad, seems kind of weird to call it that. Maybe bragging about it online as if it's some big deal is a fad but the process itself has plenty of merits. I've been doing it that way for a very long time, before the YouTube influencers started putting out instructional vids or whatever. I just like to keep things clean while I'm working, then go in for the heart/liver/tenders afterwards and don't care about a mess. I do it backwards from everyone else though, I split the skin from ankles to pits with the gut hook and connect the cuts with a long belly slit that goes all the way up the under side of the neck, again with the gut hook, then I start at the two top-side ankles and skin the top layer skin all the way back. This allows me to do all my "hair cuts" before any meat is exposed and I'm not cutting through the thick/hairy back skin. Then pull both quarters, brisket meat, neck meat, and the backstrap, then when I roll it over I pull out that section of skin as a ground cloth so none of the animal is touching the ground in case I missed some trimming. Once I finish the other side I just go ahead and quickly yank the guts out to grab the insides, no sense in doing the rib thing if I'm opening the cavity for heart and liver anyway.
Yup, I end up leaving all that attached to the front quarter then sort through it later. The less I have to put in the loose meat bags the better.This is how I take care of animal as well. The only difference is that I take all the rib meat in one big piece as well as the whole flank. Roll the guts out and pull both tenderloins. Roll the animal over onto the stretched portion of the hide and repeat the skinning and quartering process. I also hand all meat on a game pole about 20 yds or so from the carcass. I let it cool out overnight and come back the next day for quarters. The backstraps, tenderloins, and other loose portions come out with me when I leave the rest to cool.
Or the gate keepers who will say you “don’t backpack hunt” unless you use the gutless method.
Too much time on the tik toks and instagrams and not enough time in the field for them sadly.That's hilarious, but unfortunately, seems that a large percentage of millenials and gen z'ers believe that nonsense. Go figure ...... But, as for me, personally, I prefer to gut most if not all the big game animals I kill, before butchering. I then carry the pieces anywhere from a mile to fifteen miles, to a waiting plane or four-wheel-drive vehicle.
The question in this thread is, “why are you not doing it”. So you’re getting various answers to your exact question accordingly.Seems to be gatekeeping from one side here for sure...
Saying that people don't have enough time in the field if they are doing gutless is lame and laughable. I appreciate your reasonings. They are valid. Cheap shots are not. Nobody is gatekeeping anything about "backpack hunting."The question in this thread is, “why are you not doing it”. So you’re getting various answers to your exact question accordingly.
I would assume most folks who exclusively use “gutless” are scrolling right on by as this doesn’t pertain to them or what they do.
I didn’t take this as an “argumentative” thread, maybe you could start a gutless vs gutted thread and see how that one goes?
It’s been mentioned in multiple threads (not this one) that “nobody who backpack hunts” guts their animals anymore. This is a good thread to show otherwise.Saying that people don't have enough time in the field if they are doing gutless is lame and laughable. I appreciate your reasonings. They are valid. Cheap shots are not. Nobody is gatekeeping anything about "backpack hunting."
Fair point. On the alternative, I rarely backpack hunt. I just don't have the time and my family doesn't love it. Almost all of my hunts are day hunts. Last year I field butchered 7 animals. 4 my kills and the rest family and friends. All were gutless. I was genuinely curious if there was something that I was missing. Turns out, for what I want, there's not.It’s been mentioned in multiple threads (not this one) that “nobody who backpack hunts” guts their animals anymore. This is a good thread to show otherwise.
I’ve noticed that the folks who state this as fact on this site and in person, the vast majority of them, are a one big game animal per year hunter. Which isn’t a bad thing, but making strong claims as they do is what’s laughable.
You’ll get used to it.Saying that people don't have enough time in the field if they are doing gutless is lame and laughable. I appreciate your reasonings. They are valid. Cheap shots are not. Nobody is gatekeeping anything about "backpack hunting."
I'm curious how many of you guys gut an elk if you're solo hunting a long way from your vehicle.