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Warm weather Bowhunting (Saving the meat)

miff007

New Member
I hunt of an evening and have only seen deer come out at dusk. I have been holding off on harvesting for the weather to get cooler in case I cannot find my kill until morning. Does anyone know how long your have to find a deer before the meat spoils with the current weather for instance mid 70's day high 50's at night.
 
Kind of a gray area there, but I can tell you that I wouldn't eat the meat after a deer has layed out all night in 50+ degree weather. Might not bother some guys, but it's not worth the risk of getting sick to me. If you shoot it in the morning and it lays in 60 or 70 degree weather, I'd say 6 hours max. These are by no means exact times based on any sort of studies, just my personal limits.
 
Gut shot deer are much worse off as far as time goes....they intoxicate themselves with bacteria and ingesta which will spread the bacteria throughout the carcass....after death, they will spoil at a rapid rate as the body starts to cool down.
 
Amen Shredder. I helped a buddy hit a poorly hit buck last year. Ended up finding him the next day around noon, with mild temps. Lets just say if all deer tasted like that one, I would reconsider my hunting ways. AWEFUL!
 
That deer is 100 degrees (give or take a few, Shredder) at death. With the hide on and the guts holding more heat, it's not just 50 degrees you are dealing with. The average temp is probably close to 80 overnight. Now ask yourself, would you you put a steak in the 80 degree sun for 12 hours and then feed it to your family? Just "food" for thought.
 
Tuesday night i shot a deer, (B&C DOE), i found it instantly, my butcher explained that a deer is at about a 100 degrees, once guts are out temperature DROPS immediately, rinse cavity with a hose, this helps cool it, then buy a 20 lb bag of ice and insert into cavity,cover deer with tarp. get it to the cooler next morning!! my temperature was good that night, 60 degress that my ice hardly even melted. I understand i did not have REAL heat but i would not wait more than 2 hours to start looking!! hopefully everyone has vital shots!!!
 
The guts hold a lot of heat. Your butcher is right. I guess I should follow up on my last post. You still need to make your follow up decision on the quality of the shot. If you are sure the animal will expire then you better follow it up at night for an evening hunt in warm weather. If you make a marginal shot and the animal is still alive then only you know if you should push it or not.
 
smell it when you butcher...does it smell like spoiled meat? 2 things to consider.

1 breakdown of the meat is good...within reason. It's why aged meat is more tender than fresh. The breakdown of tissue is time and temperature dependent, spoiled meat smells like spoiled meat, otherwise you've just accomplished overnight what you would have done hanging the deer in the back yard for 3 days at 38°.

Bacteria are different matter entirely. If you've got shot the deer...and by gut shot, I'm including stomach and esophagus, all bets are off. You've introduced enteric bacteria to the bloodstream and I'd be real careful. Otherwise, bacteria aren't as much of an issue except in the immediate vicinity of the wound. The majority of the meat is inaccesible to bacteria at this stage. Why is a rare steak a treat and a rare hamburger a trip to the emergency room...a steak is solid, the bacteria is on the surface where the surface of ground meat extends to the middle.

If it doesn't stink, and you didn't gut shoot it, but you're still worried. Consider any meat that could have come in direct contact with the outside environment and throw it out. You'll keep your backstraps, and hams.

My opinion...possibly worth a shiny nickel, but probably just a crudy penny.
 
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My opinion...possibly worth a shiny nickel, but probably just a crudy penny.

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grin.gif
Never heard that one before..pretty funny
 
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