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WILD GAME Field Care - Tips Based on A Decade of Packing Out ELK MEAT 

Cliff Gray
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Cliff dives into the ins and outs of keeping elk and deer meat fresh in the field during hunting expeditions. In this episode, he shares personal anecdotes and valuable tips on how to handle and preserve game meat effectively. From dissipation of heat to minimizing contamination, you'll learn practical strategies to ensure your meat stays in top condition.
This conversation is particularly useful to elk hunters hunting in remote areas via backpack hunting or horse/mule pack-in trips.
00:00:00
A Story of Spoiling A Big Bull Elk
Cliff narrates an encounter with two backpack hunters in need of assistance after a challenging packout. He reflects on the importance of proper meat handling in the field.
"Sam slowly walks over from unsaddling a mule and he's standing there next to me. He just glances at this young guy and goes, "Son, are you going to eat those hooves?"
00:02:57
Dissipating Heat and Gutless Method
Cliff emphasizes the critical time around dissipating heat from freshly harvested game meat using the gutless method and a protocol around getting the meat cooling down quickly. He stresses the importance of quick action to prevent spoilage.
"If you do a few little things to dissipate the heat and then hang the meat the right way, you can come out of those mountains with a very good product 3-4 days later."
00:17:03
Choosing the Right Hanging Spot
Cliff discusses the importance of selecting an optimal location to hang meat, emphasizing the need to avoid sunlight exposure and prioritize cooler environments.
"Remember, don't hang the meat up in aspens. Aspens mean sunlight, and they don't have a canopy like conifers, so almost always they're a horrible spot to hang up meat."
00:21:36
Most Common Mistakes
Cliff shares tips on dissipating heat from freshly harvested game meat to prevent spoilage, emphasizing the significance of finding the animal quickly and starting the cooling process.
"Get to the animals as soon as possible. Push it a little bit. Your chances of not having spoilage, particularly on large big game animals like moose, big bears, and elk goes way down if you do."
00:33:08
Contamination Concerns
Cliff discusses the importance of minimizing contamination in game meat, highlighting the risks associated with hair, fecal material, and other sources of bacteria.
"Keep the hair away. If you never process your own game meat, you're always trying to keep as much meat on there, you're barely taking off bloodshot meat. That is the wrong approach."
00:35:02
Trimming Meat to Avoid Contamination
Cliff discusses the importance of trimming meat to prevent contamination, emphasizing the need to follow the muscle groups' seams for cleaner results.
"If you follow the seams of the muscle groups when boning out quarters, you'll end up with much more yield and a cleaner product."
00:39:35
Handling Moisture
Cliff provides advice on managing moisture when transporting game meat, suggesting methods to keep hides and capes cool without introducing excess humidity.
"If you follow these tips and tricks, I promise you, you're going to have very minimal problems. I had very little elk spoilage, almost none in all my guided camps."
#elk #deer #elkhunting #archery #fieldcraft #pursuitwithcliff
---
Below you will find Amazon Affiliate links to products discussed or used in the video. I make a commission from your use of these links, but using the link will not affect the price you pay for any items.
Heavy Duty 55 Gallon Bags for putting meat in streams.
amzn.to/49ub3ZX
---
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Checkout a Bunch of Gear Cliff Uses on His Amazon Store - amazon.com/shop/CliffGray
WATCH MORE FROM CLIFF:
Hunting Skillsets - • Hunting Skill Sets
E-Scouting Series - • E-Scouting
Hunting Gear - • Mountain Hunting Gear
Glassing - • Glassing
Catch, Clean, Cook Adventures - • Catch, Cook, Clean Adv...
Hunt Preparation and Logistics - • Fall Hunt Preparation
Hunting Horseback - • Horseback Mountain Hun...
Marksmanship - • Mountain Hunting Marks...
Wildlife Tracking - • Wildlife Tracking
PLEASE NOTE:
*Cliff no longer takes on new guided hunt or expedition clients. He sold all operating outfitting/guiding businesses prior to 2021.

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26 фев 2024

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Комментарии : 63   
@tomgriffith8364
@tomgriffith8364 3 месяца назад
When hunting solo I always have a mylar emergency blanket. It weighs nothing and provides a clean place to lay quarters as they come off the carcass. If its raining it is a tarp to protect meat.
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
great tip. most folks have them in their first aid kits, too
@Adam_Bileckyj
@Adam_Bileckyj 3 месяца назад
Yup, also makes a good "don't shoot me" attached to the antlers on the pack out.
@Yetified_Mayhem
@Yetified_Mayhem 3 месяца назад
That's a great tip. I have heaps of those
@serosedserio6531
@serosedserio6531 3 месяца назад
Awesome tips. Sad to say I have packed out a hoof or two.
@thedarkwolf9423
@thedarkwolf9423 Месяц назад
Thank you for that tip.
@MiddleOutdoorsman
@MiddleOutdoorsman 3 месяца назад
Some of this video I kinda sorta learned the hard way. The following is just my layman's opinion, here's what I think I learned, in August: - You really are racing the clock, particularly if its the afternoon, and the elk decides to die in the sun. - Get the hide off ASAP - Even if your using the gutless method, at least vent the belly, or the gas buildup is going to cause bloat big time. Your going to have those old internet images of exploding whales going through your head, at least I did. - Don't get the meat dirty, period. It won't wash off. Dirty meat ends up being wasted. - Avoid boning out if you can. For one, I doubt you'll have the time to do a nice job of it. For two, your end product is going to be "Elk Mystery meat". It's all too much work, to have that as an end result. For Three, you risk getting the meat dirty. - Packing out, your going to be using a metric buttload of water. If you have to, bring back the tenderloins and backstrap to camp first, and refill up on water before your final push on the packout. - Assuming your solo, Relay the the packout. One of the smartest decisions I ever made, was to relay the meat away from the kill site, to a collection point I marked on OnX. From that collection point, I then moved it to my next collection point. Eventually, I get all the meat to a final collection point for the final packout. I think this relay method is absolutely necessary if your final packout is uphill to the road, and your solo. That final stretch will be MUCH shorter, rather than going all the way back to the kill site each time. It's a mental game really. In December with snow on the ground: - You have more time generally speaking. - You don't have to worry about getting the meat dirty. - Even with the gutless method, I'll still at least drop the guts a little if only to make the tenderloins easier to get to. - A properly made pulk sled will save you a TON of work. We're talking a solo packout of 1 trip instead of 5. - If you have only one knife, don't make it one with a gut hook. - I hate packing out in August. I much prefer a late season packout. Some gear choices reflecting what I've learned: 1. I like to pack a small lightweight ground sheet in my kill kit. It doesn't weigh much, and it's a guaranteed dirt free spot to lay the quarters on in case I totally botch the hide removal. 2. I like to have 5, pre cut lengths of blaze orange 550 cord, looped on one end, and ready to go. Makes hanging quarters in a pine much quicker, and hassle free. 3. I like to have bank line in my emergency kit. In part to make an emergency shelter, but also in part to make a meat pole if I have to. 4. A BAHCO laplander saw is great for two things: Cutting a pole if i have to, or cutting the bottom leg off a quarter. I've found that sometimes I can cut it off no problem, other times I have trouble. The saw is handy in case i lose my patience and decide to drop the bottom of the leg into the fukketbucket and just saw the Mother Fer off. 5. Five relatively good quality game bags, made of cloth, with a draw cord. NOT anything made of cheesecloth or mesh. It's just shit that will rip at some point. You can always count on me writing a freaking essay into a comment. 😁
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
great stuff man. tons of additional tips in here. appreciate the comment
@Yetified_Mayhem
@Yetified_Mayhem 3 месяца назад
Awesome breakdown!
@zacktaylor3441
@zacktaylor3441 3 месяца назад
Great Video Cliff. I think this is extremely important. With the fad status of solo elk hunting there are a lot of guys having the unpleasant realization that they were not prepared for the huge amount of work involved in taking care of a dead elk. I would unfortunately say its the minority of elk hunters that can competently handle an elk with a partner or two and only a very small number that can realistically handle an elk on a backpack hunt.
@steveb1776
@steveb1776 3 месяца назад
You need to put this video in a written article in Bugle magazine and even give thought to selling all this info on a CD-it’s that good!!
@PNW_Wolfpack_Adventures
@PNW_Wolfpack_Adventures 3 месяца назад
Another anti weenie move is making sure you have a good headlamp with fresh batteries. If you can see what you are doing and know you have good light it helps staying late and taking care of business. Great video
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
great additional tip. In colder weather, even making a fire will help a guy get through field dressing and quartering
@huntsimple9527
@huntsimple9527 3 месяца назад
If we knew how much elk meat is lost each fall due to lack of planning and common sense, it would shock us. I have come across a few hunters with kills and I could tell they had no clue what they were going to do. A plan for meat care should be at the top of the list, not a "what if" that will be figured out later. I do bow hunt alone in the September heat sometimes, and when doing that I will only hunt where I know I can extract that meat by myself in a timeframe that prevents meat spoilage. At a minimum, I owe that to the animal and I believe I owe that to my fellow hunters.
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
True. And yes, knowing your limitations to retrieve all the meat is important.
@nj-bz8pv
@nj-bz8pv 3 месяца назад
Also our biggest obstacle in Colorado is polesmoker polis and his anti hunting husband
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
bwhaha!!!!
@branndonbowman
@branndonbowman 3 месяца назад
So much good information, thank you Cliff 🤝
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
Glad it was helpful!
@paultellier2147
@paultellier2147 3 месяца назад
Great video as always.
@jayfxdx
@jayfxdx 3 месяца назад
Being efficient with your time and effective your efforts matter! Keep caffeine handy and push yourself to finish the job. Lots of great info and very educational video, thanks cliff.
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
thanks!
@paoemantega8793
@paoemantega8793 3 месяца назад
Excellent, full of good useful advice, thankyou
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
thanks! glad it was helpful
@1shotbarbeque881
@1shotbarbeque881 3 месяца назад
Great advice..Straight from the G.O.A.T 🇺🇲 merica
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
thanks!
@user-mn5tg6vz1j
@user-mn5tg6vz1j 3 месяца назад
Great meat care tips Cliff ! Some places in Colorado, it's a real challenge now to find three live Spruce trees together. Many TV and movie productions are going to Canada to get footage of live trees.
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
thanks!
@SurvivalHunting
@SurvivalHunting 3 месяца назад
great knowledge! im sure this will help many people, i know ive seen plenty of these mistakes that buddies of mine have made
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
thanks!
@GH-ru9kk
@GH-ru9kk 3 месяца назад
You never had piss soaked elk hoof chili? Num nums. 😂 Thanks for the info some good tips.
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
bwahahaha, thanks!
@chadclayburg1410
@chadclayburg1410 3 месяца назад
I see the same thing every year hunting the coast range in Oregon.
@nj-bz8pv
@nj-bz8pv 3 месяца назад
I worked in an area with a ton of Mexicans when I was a kid. We sold pig hooves all the time to them
@tonymorrison5023
@tonymorrison5023 3 месяца назад
Great video and very informative. Assuming you are able to get the bull or buck gutted and hide off within three hours of death how long would you feel comfortable hanging quarters in September? Assuming that it is in an adequately shaded spot and an average day time temperature of 70 and night time temp of 45.
@ZanderKalashnikov
@ZanderKalashnikov 6 дней назад
Idk who would want to go into town for McDonald’s in the middle of a successful hunt with a harvest to complete 😂
@user-xz3ef5fy8k
@user-xz3ef5fy8k 3 месяца назад
Great video. Cliff. One question do you think putting the meat in a creek 4 a few days. It's what I done twice. Worked 4 me. But is it a good idea
@desperado8605
@desperado8605 3 месяца назад
Had a guy say he takes a bottle of lemon juice to spray on the quarters to speed up the crusting
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
I've never used it. I have used diluted vinegar when hanging meat at home. That is more for a bacteria kill step.
@desperado8605
@desperado8605 3 месяца назад
@@CliffGray yeah I'd never heard of it til he said it
@COREYDEER
@COREYDEER 3 месяца назад
So last archery season I shot a nice mule deer buck with a big body. It was 91 degrees when he died. I worked fast to get him gutted and into some shade for a quad to come grab him. Within 5 hours I had him home, boned out and one ice in my large cooler. The next morning the ice was mainly cool water but when I took meat to butcher he said it was not a big deal because it was only for a short time. Meat was still very tasty. So my question is what is the matter with water logged meat? Is it just a bacteria thing if it’s not cooled?
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
I’ve traveled with meat on ice a lot over the years and had the same situation numerous times. No issues. The problem arises if you get the meat wet/hunid and then it is exposed to warm temps again. The best example in the field would be cool night, rain in the AM soaking meat and game bags, then a 70-80degree day. You will get bacteria growth in the meat much worse than if the meat was cool/dry/rind going into the warm day. Overall I think people worry too much about meat getting a bit damp in the cooler, particularly if it’s going from cooler straight to getting processed (not ageing/hanging)
@COREYDEER
@COREYDEER 3 месяца назад
@@CliffGray ok cool. So ya it’s the warming again that’s the issue. Thanks cliff.
@briancharles5989
@briancharles5989 3 месяца назад
Have worked many years as a wrangler packer and have got to see lots of meat issues! Looking to start a packing business on the grand Mesa area, to help with this same story for groups that have got to deep to back pack out, any advice on doing so?
@XhaleSpearfishing
@XhaleSpearfishing 3 месяца назад
Assuming time isn't the biggest concern, is boning out the quarters a good idea? seems to me like opening up the whole quarter would dissipate even more heat quicker, and would save you some more weight on packout. I don't see many people doing this so I'm assuming theres a good reason :)
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
If night time temps are below 40-45, I generally don't bone out meat. One night at those temps, with meat hung up, will get the heat out of the meat. At higher temps, if I can get the meat out within the day (bull shot early morning), again I don't typically bone it out. Boning meat makes it much harder to pack and it makes it harder to keep the meat clean. A bit counterintuitive given the weight savings of removing the bones, but long bones do a good job of distributing the meat vertically in the pack. I've boned out a few big horn rams purely for the weight/bulk savings when packing meat out with camp in one run. Basically couldn't fit the bones in and the other gear made it so I could distribute weight in my pack how I wanted it.
@Yetified_Mayhem
@Yetified_Mayhem 3 месяца назад
Headline: "RU-vidr Cliff Gray prevents 1 million lbs of game meat from spoil in the 2025 fall hunt. "
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
bwhahah! i like it
@justinjones2882
@justinjones2882 3 месяца назад
Great advice and video. A kayaking z drag kit, and some good downloaded tunes shaved time off my quartering jobs.
@charlesbond4413
@charlesbond4413 3 месяца назад
Okay, I watched this entire video waiting for some help getting the elk in the tree. Several years ago I lost my hunting partner. With a rope thrown over a branch and one lifting, we could hang high enough for the wolves and black bear, grizzly’s, well we were lucky. So now, older, wiser and weaker, I was looking for a way to hang the quarters when I’m solo. I’ve tried years ago a pulley, but the results were so so. I’ve used poles, limbed sapling trees and lifted and pulled my rope at the same time. Ugly, not very effective but the quarters are off the ground. What don’t I know about hanging an animal. Share your secrets when solo.
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
it's hard. I honestly don't have a great solution for you. Depending on your remoteness, I have seen people use chain saw winches, portable winches. Z-rigs with carabiners can create an insane amount of mechanical advantage. look at 3:1 z-rigs
@Yetified_Mayhem
@Yetified_Mayhem 3 месяца назад
I'd be happy to come lend a hand if you're in central Idaho;)
@charlesbond4413
@charlesbond4413 3 месяца назад
Thanks Mayhem, but I fly into the center of the frank church and get dropped off. You want to help, you need to be there for two weeks. I appreciate the offer. More than you know. I help several panhandle hunters with elk retrieval if I’m not hunting myself. That’s especially important during archery season as it is often warm.
@davehood2534
@davehood2534 3 месяца назад
Look into Pack-a-Pull. I forget where they’re located, but I carry three mini pulleys and dyneema cord.3:1 advantage.There is an Idaho company that has similar gear, but more expensive,saw the ad in the back of the regs booklet some years ago.
@arthurquintana1345
@arthurquintana1345 3 месяца назад
I want to breed some mules. Are quarter mules good for packing? Are 15hand mules a good size to pack. Thanks for the video!
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
quarter horse mules are great but I prefer draft crosses. In the end disposition of the individual parents matters most.
@arthurquintana1345
@arthurquintana1345 3 месяца назад
@@CliffGray thanks Cliff thats what I say disposition is very important
@daneblackburn613
@daneblackburn613 3 месяца назад
I was wondering what your hunting rifle weighs? Mine is almost 12 pounds. I shoot it great. Reading sounds like that is a problem when hunting out west
@CliffGray
@CliffGray 3 месяца назад
Depends on the type of hunt. For backpack hunts, it’s going to be rough. Horseback or vehicle-based, not a big deal. Most my elk hunting rifles are 8-9lbs
@JacopoSkydweller
@JacopoSkydweller 3 месяца назад
Having done a couple Rocky Mountain hunts with a nearly 13 lb rifle... It sucks. It's basically cutting down either -your speed -your mileage -your morale. The less weight carried the better. It was bad enough that I am getting a custom built carbon fiber stock and wrapped barrel to bring it down to about 8 lbs with a scope. I'm a leftie so custom was really the only option for all the features I wanted.
@glassduck985
@glassduck985 Месяц назад
Why don’t you just debone it?
@andreisharma
@andreisharma 20 дней назад
Or take a hack saw. Bone broth and marrow is great
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