I know how you feel. We hunt in a burn and we carry contractor trash bags or small tarps now to keep the meat clean while we work on it. Of course, we also use game bags.Yes it was a muddy mess and I cleaned for hours before they went into the cooler.
Absolutely no problem I hope everyone will share a picture or two if not more of there hunts. Thank you for sharing.Not meant to hijack the thread. Just a demo of how much an "easy elk" can still be a ton of work.
My uncle Hank did it like this on moose when he lived in Maine, pretty niftyAbsolutely no problem I hope everyone will share a picture or two if not more of there hunts. Thank you for sharing.
We use 9/16 crab line and a half a dozen blocks if I can get the truck with in a mile it's coming out whole.
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A boat cleat in the receiver and they hit the road in one piece. Those two cows came out in the same pull. About 350 yards of line and a couple passes and they were on the road.
The long story is I bought the rifle off an old friend I meet at the rifle range. He ended up being a class mate of my late grandfather and after 15 years of asking about the rifle he sold it to me with the promise I would kill a pile animal with it. This elk was the third animal I have taken with it. The first two were bison . The plan is a couple black bear and a Cape buffalo if my 404j is not done by 2025.@FredIII Congratulations!
Why carry a heavier gun when the 7-08ai works just the same! (I guess you don’t need to answer that.)
Moving an elk is massive work. It is amazing how easily a calm horse can drag an elk. Even more amazing is how fast a not-so-calm horse can drag and elk. Your crab line system seems safer!
Not meant to hijack the thread. Just a demo of how much an "easy elk" can still be a ton of work.