F*** you young bucks. I had a fair go at some back steaks tonight, lived a reasonable healthy live up until now, bugger yi,s.
Printable View
F*** you young bucks. I had a fair go at some back steaks tonight, lived a reasonable healthy live up until now, bugger yi,s.
you fellas eat fish fingers/fish patties????
spent years in fish factory in Timaru..all the barracouda that was overly wormy,had been dropped on floor or broken up went into the fish finger bins..... red cod was a shocker for worms too,looked for all the world like 15-20lb nylon .
if you look at requirements for feeding mutton to a dog.....frozen for a week or cooked to X degrees for X time..thats to kill off any chance of hydatids worm,passing itself onto dog....... freeze venison for week..yeah right,some of the stuff in my freezer will be closer to 18months..... correct rotation in freezer will see all meat getting frozen for at least a month.
If you like any particular food, never get involved in commercial production of such. I worked in an apple pack house many years ago. I saw what gets sent to the juicers. And know that a true vegetarian should not drink 100% fruit juice....becauce litle mice etc end up in the vats and there is a tolerance for how many are accidentally included before it has to be discarded...And mice like to hide in big bins of juicy apples...
Wait till you shoot a few roos down our way.Thort we would cooked a youngn up.Shot one,took a back keg off and its stomach was moving like a rumbling quake.Cut it open,well it stomach was full of white big worms squirming around.Ended up at hawk tucker.No chain pulling on this story either.
Normal for roos and wallabies to have large infestations of nematodes in the gut.:
https://www.kangaroosatrisk.org/uplo..._macropods.pdf
Page 17
Apparently harmless to humans but you are quite right that it'll give most anyone second thoughts.Quote:
Major alimentary tract nematodes
The nematode parasites of Australian native mammals, particularly macropods, often are impressive in their prevalence, mass, magnitude and diversity. In the case of kangaroos, for example, up to 40
nematode species, all belonging to a single order, occur in the complex saccular fore-stomach of individual host species. In most cases, however, even heavy worm infestations are not detrimental to the host.