rclouse79
WKR
- Joined
- Dec 10, 2019
- Messages
- 1,858
I beg to differ. Elk smell is my favorite smell in the world. I have never had a problem with tainted meat.
I went gutless method for my first time today with a buck I shot last night just before losing light. Opened his back up to cool off last night pulling skin off midway down each shoulder, came back this morning and something had ripped his guts out behind the ribs all over the meat... first attempt backfired, may go back to gutting asap. So far a lot of the meat has that guts smell even after rinsed, will see how it tastes but might be dogfood.Do the gutless method, which keeps your cuts and hands away from the belly that is covered in urine and stench. I have found that this is important because it will transfer the smell and taste to the meat. Several pairs of gloves would work too, but I don't carry any.
don't worry, none of the meat will be wasted. I left it because with poor light from headlamp, exhaustion of a long day, and hands numb from cold, I figured I'd be more efficient, safer, and happier butchering in the morning. Seeing as below freezing didn't seem like a big deal, do you always butcher and packout whole animal if you shoot at dusk?why would you leave it overnight on the ground. they have these new things called flashlights. raccoons, coyotes, skunks, etc will take advantage of the free meal.
no disrespect but what a waste that could have been avoided.
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalkd
I've been doing warm weather elk in NM for a long time (40 yrs) and your meat had a very high probability of having bone sour and to top it off you say he was gut shot which can also taint the meat.Thanks for all your input guys. My theory that this is contamination from the hide is still panning out, but I'm also wondering if I could be dealing with a bit of widespread spoilage as well. We shot this bull mid afternoon in mid September in AZ and did not find it til next morning. Temps at night were colder and it was shaded all day, not baking in the sun...but it is still a dead elk in September with the guts punctured. The degree of nasty tasting meat is still hit or miss, but I am wondering if what I am tasting is the start of meat spoilage since it seems to be somewhat wide spread. Everything smelled fine while we were field butchering. I just don't know what the start of meat spoilage tastes like and the taste is so much like how the hide smelled. Every deer, bear, and pig I have shot has been recovered within a few hours, so I haven't dealt with spoilage before.
Second person today on here saying they left an animal laying overnight that they found. If you’re little fingers get to cold to process it and hang it in a tree away from the carcass then don’t shoot them in the evening.I went gutless method for my first time today with a buck I shot last night just before losing light. Opened his back up to cool off last night pulling skin off midway down each shoulder, came back this morning and something had ripped his guts out behind the ribs all over the meat... first attempt backfired, may go back to gutting asap. So far a lot of the meat has that guts smell even after rinsed, will see how it tastes but might be dogfood.
This is a year old but it wasn’t the stink from the hide. You had some tainted meat. It’ll stink up a kitchen after being cooked. Something about the process of cooking brings out the smell. A bull left overnight will have spoilage. Neck, ball joints, tenderloins.Thanks for all your input guys. My theory that this is contamination from the hide is still panning out, but I'm also wondering if I could be dealing with a bit of widespread spoilage as well. We shot this bull mid afternoon in mid September in AZ and did not find it til next morning. Temps at night were colder and it was shaded all day, not baking in the sun...but it is still a dead elk in September with the guts punctured. The degree of nasty tasting meat is still hit or miss, but I am wondering if what I am tasting is the start of meat spoilage since it seems to be somewhat wide spread. Everything smelled fine while we were field butchering. I just don't know what the start of meat spoilage tastes like and the taste is so much like how the hide smelled. Every deer, bear, and pig I have shot has been recovered within a few hours, so I haven't dealt with spoilage before.
yeah that is what I have come to conclude. Lessons learned.This is a year old but it wasn’t the stink from the hide. You had some tainted meat. It’ll stink up a kitchen after being cooked. Something about the process of cooking brings out the smell. A bull left overnight will have spoilage. Neck, ball joints, tenderloins.
Do you have any tips on keeping a testical on each ham when doing the gutless method for evidence of sex?Do the gutless method, which keeps your cuts and hands away from the belly that is covered in urine and stench. I have found that this is important because it will transfer the smell and taste to the meat. Several pairs of gloves would work too, but I don't carry any.
Sorry but have quartered and left many an elk overnight in the filed, no problems. Sometimes you just have to. Take care of the carcass and no problems. Left a gutted cow once overnight and quartered it next morning, no issues as well. get the guts out and prop it open and you'll be fine, no need top pack in the dark.Second person today on here saying they left an animal laying overnight that they found. If you’re little fingers get to cold to process it and hang it in a tree away from the carcass then don’t shoot them in the evening.
Sorry but have quartered and left many an elk overnight in the filed, no problems. Sometimes you just have to. Take care of the carcass and no problems. Left a gutted cow once overnight and quartered it next morning, no issues as well. get the guts out and prop it open and you'll be fine, no need top pack in the dark.
A couple buddies and I hunted Colorado this year, thats why I ask. I believe once the head is detached from the carcus, the head is no longer sufficient evidence of sex.Hough, everywhere I have hunted requires the antlers for males, or the scalp on cow elk. I have never left the testicles attached.
Elk will be fine if skinned, quartered and left overnight. I have done that many times.
If just gutted and left on the ground overnight you are just asking to lose a bunch of meat to spoilage. The hide is so thick that the meat will not cool. My brother worked at a game processor for several years. They processed 250 or so elk a year. In winter guys would kill a cow elk near the road in the morning, gut it and load it in the pickup, then hunt the rest of the day and bring it in that evening or the next morning. The shanks would be frozen solid, but the neck and center of the hams would still be hot and already starting to stink and go bone sour. Anyone who tells you otherwise is lying or has never dealt with elk.