Free: Contests & Raffles.
I freeze water in old plastic milk jugs ( of the like). Keeps the cooler cold and the water does not flood when the ice melts. It keeps the cooler cool, but not ice cold. Set the game bag(s) on top. If fact I did this last night with a Turkey
Depending on the situation, I have laid clean wood sticks in the bottom of coolers or refrigerators to keep meat an inch or two off of the bottom and out of any water or blood that pools in the bottom. If you have a drain, you can drain it once in awhile before melt water rises to touch the meat. Frozen jugs and plastic bottles of water are preferred but I always seem to wind up with free water in the bottom, some of it leaking out of the meat.Sticks laid on the bottom also work to keep a pack out of splash and drip water in the bottom of a canoe.
You can get just about any idea fact stamped here on the interwebs! I wish I had saved the video but water can actually promote bacteria growth. Which will lead to spoilage. Get the meat deboned and in game bags ASAP. Happy hunting
Quote from: elkrack on September 03, 2020, 06:20:25 AMYou can get just about any idea fact stamped here on the interwebs! I wish I had saved the video but water can actually promote bacteria growth. Which will lead to spoilage. Get the meat deboned and in game bags ASAP. Happy hunting One thing i feel like i've heard a lot on higher elevation backcountry hunts is putting the meat in garbage bags so its relatively sealed and submerging them in an alpine creek when you're in a pinch. If the meat isn't in contact with the water would this still result in bacteria growth? Doesn't seem like it would but I've never been in a position to have to try it.