When it's too warm to hang, I'll quarter out, wrap the quarters in plastic sheeting, and then age in the garage fridge for a week or so. Have never aged part of a deer and butchered the rest right away for a true test to see how well aging works. Do know I like the result when I can let them age a week, whether it's hanging in the garage when the weather's cool enough to do so or the refrigerator aging. Edit: was still on page one when I typed my reply and missed 203ntyp's reply. Looks like I pretty much copied it other than by wrapping in plastic I'm probably a little closer to wet aging instead of dry when I'm using the fridge. Definitely agree on not over-cooking.