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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Missouri Gobbler
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<blockquote data-quote="sambo3006" data-source="post: 108005" data-attributes="member: 2740"><p>Ian,</p><p>I usually just take the breast, which can be easily removed by tearing the skin loose and filetting it out. I do this soon after pictures or if I have to go to work, I gut out the bird and hang it under the house by the feet with the body cavity packed full of ice. The next morning the breast feels like it was in a cooler.</p><p>huntem,</p><p>glad to see the picture! You're not hijacking the post at all.</p><p></p><p>Just to be clear, my Kansas coyote was legally taken. In Kansas, you can hunt coyotes all year round with no limit as long as you have a hunting license.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="sambo3006, post: 108005, member: 2740"] Ian, I usually just take the breast, which can be easily removed by tearing the skin loose and filetting it out. I do this soon after pictures or if I have to go to work, I gut out the bird and hang it under the house by the feet with the body cavity packed full of ice. The next morning the breast feels like it was in a cooler. huntem, glad to see the picture! You're not hijacking the post at all. Just to be clear, my Kansas coyote was legally taken. In Kansas, you can hunt coyotes all year round with no limit as long as you have a hunting license. [/QUOTE]
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