Free: Contests & Raffles.
a good filet knife is indispensable! that, with a good medium (4-6") sized knife will get you started. vacuum sealer or heavy plastic and freezer paper for wrapping. I would NEVER take an animal to a butcher. it's too easy to do yourself to spend a bunch of money on it. 1: take your time (it can take my dad and i 8 hours to do a deer, but we're SUPER picky and EVERYTHING is COMPLETELY clean!)2: make sure it's very clean (dirt, hair, leaves, tendon, membranes... ALL GONE)3: keep it cool (you can keep it cool in a ice chest as long as you keep it separate from the ice/water)4: Leave the meat in chunks. when you thaw it out, you can decide if you want thick steaks, thin, cubes, etc.5: label all your packages! keep those backstraps separate!6: we don't hang an animal for very long, unless it's really cold. most deer are cut the day after they're shot. some people will tell you to hang an animal for a week... you're free to do what you want, but i've never seen the need to wait. 7: make it fun! get your friends involved, have a drink, turn the radio on, tell lies stories! 8: making sausage/hamburger isn't hard, either! if you or someone you know has a kitchenaid stand mixer, you can get a grinder attachment for them. it's fine for general use, but if you shoot a moose, you'd want something a bit bigger... some hog fat& a ham for sausage or cheap 20% fat hamburger to mix hamburger, you're good to go! 9: you can cut a deer on your kitchen counter! bring one quarter in at a time (and don't cut the countertop! ). keep your work area, hands, knives, etc CLEAN! Cleanliness = tasty meat!are you rifle or archery hunting? the WSAA (Washington state archery association) has a lot of members in your area, and i bet you could get some pointers pretty easy! there's some pictures on their facebook! https://www.facebook.com/groups/washingtonarchery/