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i would LOVE to see someone skin a deer like that in the field in five minutes. Way different when a deer is hung at your house IMO
Quote from: BLRman on December 12, 2016, 09:11:22 AMSorry but nothing anyone says will convince me that hides are as precious as the flesh my family consumes. Also, not all of us shoot deer close to vehicles or places that are ideal for skinning. I don't know a single backpack hunter who packs out a whole hide. Deer or elk. I can see leaving behind a hide if you're VERY far out. That's probably one of the few times I consider it fine to do. But probably (this is a total guess) 60% of hunters in Washington hunt no further than 5 miles from there truck.
Sorry but nothing anyone says will convince me that hides are as precious as the flesh my family consumes. Also, not all of us shoot deer close to vehicles or places that are ideal for skinning. I don't know a single backpack hunter who packs out a whole hide. Deer or elk.
I would like to nominate this for dumbest thread of the year. Comparing tossing a hide to wasting meat is idiotic.
Quote from: police women of America on December 12, 2016, 10:40:44 AMQuote from: BLRman on December 12, 2016, 09:11:22 AMSorry but nothing anyone says will convince me that hides are as precious as the flesh my family consumes. Also, not all of us shoot deer close to vehicles or places that are ideal for skinning. I don't know a single backpack hunter who packs out a whole hide. Deer or elk. I can see leaving behind a hide if you're VERY far out. That's probably one of the few times I consider it fine to do. But probably (this is a total guess) 60% of hunters in Washington hunt no further than 5 miles from there truck.How many deer have you personally skinned? How many hides have you packed out of the hills?Sent from my E6782 using Tapatalk
Quote from: Bigshooter on December 12, 2016, 11:58:54 AMI would like to nominate this for dumbest thread of the year. Comparing tossing a hide to wasting meat is idiotic. Take it easy I believe she is a minor. Her views are a little skewed but experience comes with time.
Also, there is a certain person who does Bears as a specialty that was soliciting people with deer hides so she can use them for people who have ruined their deer capes. It was a Facebook post.... I'm not saying it's a member who doesn't post here any more.... Probably a fine upstanding business person..
Quote from: h2ofowlr on December 11, 2016, 09:56:26 PMI have never saved one. Not interested in having them tanned and have no use for them unfortunately. There are no orange barrels collecting them where I am to make gloves, etc. It is what it is. I hunt for the meat, as I love venison. Not a trophy hunter unless it's waterfowl.You can EARN money by giving them to local taxidermists. Throwing away hides is just as bad as leaving behind backstrips in my book. It's just.... Such a waste.All you have to do is drop them off or ship them to Moscow Hide and Fur (Although Moscow requires that you flesh the hides). I know it's not the most convenient process, but as a hunter isn't it worth knowing that it doesn't go to waste?In the future when I'm an adult I want to try to make it easier for hunters to give away there hides without going through this process.
I have never saved one. Not interested in having them tanned and have no use for them unfortunately. There are no orange barrels collecting them where I am to make gloves, etc. It is what it is. I hunt for the meat, as I love venison. Not a trophy hunter unless it's waterfowl.
two extra minutes for an expert on flat ground, who isnt doing any packing. [/quot:]Practice makes perfect. I'll add another 3 minutes if it isn't flat ground. So now we have 10 minutes if it isn't hanged and you're not on flat ground. Most experienced hunters look for a hill to skin/gut their deer so the blood can drain easily and gravity works with them to get the guts out. So I think for most spots finding flat ground or a slight hit is common. And again, personally I think it's fine to leave a hide behind if you're too far in the backcountry to haul it. And if you have trouble skinning deer, Amazon and Cabelas have tools to help you.
I just watched it, his knife skills scare me the way he cuts up and at himself As far as the wastage of a hide compared to meat, not even close. Meat is the usable/consumable portion of the animal that i as a hunter am after, i don't need nor want the hide, bones, brain etc etc so i don't keep them. Now i have in the past kept hides and had them tanned both hair on and off and they look great in the box stored on a shelf in the garage. When the tannery was here in mayrsville i would if i could save them and get gloves in exchange, but only if it was easy to keep, if packing no way.I would be careful to not categorize hunters that do not do what you do as wasteful as long as they are following the law