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Hunting
Elk Hunting
Tools for quartering elk
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<blockquote data-quote="ATH" data-source="post: 1395652" data-attributes="member: 1656"><p>I've process my own and done both gutted and boneless, and now I only do boneless. If you do it right you do not lose meat. You do NOT leave the side or neck meat, you take all of that. The only thing you lose is the organ meat if you are interested in that.</p><p></p><p>Every elk I've shot has been too far from the vehicle to come out any way other than backpack, so bones don't come along for the ride. I carry a Wyoming saw to get the rack off, it's lighter than carrying the head out, especially on an elk.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ATH, post: 1395652, member: 1656"] I've process my own and done both gutted and boneless, and now I only do boneless. If you do it right you do not lose meat. You do NOT leave the side or neck meat, you take all of that. The only thing you lose is the organ meat if you are interested in that. Every elk I've shot has been too far from the vehicle to come out any way other than backpack, so bones don't come along for the ride. I carry a Wyoming saw to get the rack off, it's lighter than carrying the head out, especially on an elk. [/QUOTE]
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Tools for quartering elk
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