Yes, the cost gets to us too.
When we homekill now, we shoot in late July (coldest time of the year here at 600m ASL in the CNI), skin and gut hanging from the front end loader, then hang on the south side of the house under cover for 10 days wrapped in old sheets to keep any blowies running on antifreeze away.
After one and a half days on the knives you can get a bit over it all, but its all worth it when you get to eating it
I have an awesome nabour that has a chiller for his pig hunting that Im sure if I cover the cost of power and chip a bit of beef his way will be more than happy to let me use it
how long do you hang a young bull in the chiller for? 7-10days like normal?
fuck it I like how you are thinking
I chop up everything else on 4 legs so how is a cow any different
plus It turns my guts how rough home kill guys are with their laxed attitude to cleanlyness and cross contamination with other blood on his truck tray
last cow he shot for me he hit in the nasal cavity then started explaining to me why it happened while the poor cow was snorting out blood
I had to tell him to shut the fuck up and finish the job
Sounds like you have a bit of bad luck with your homekill guy. We do miss sometimes and have to give it a quick follow up. As for hanging it depends on the chiller if it's running around 2 degrees then 14 days is Allgood. If you want to do the job over a couple of weekends kill it 1 Saturday bone it the next Saturday and re hang in primal and pack it the 3rd Saturday. If the chiller is running warm or being opened all the time it shortens up the hanging time. Make sure the chiller is on and down to temperature before putting the beef in alot make the mistake of putting it in then turning the chiller on. For cutting a beef in half a bacho saw works good or if you have a reciprocating saw get a makita or bosch stainless blade don't use a chainsaw makes alot of mess and the bone fragments will go green first. Hope this helps out a bit
I use a cordless reciprocating saw with a stainless blade (30 or 40 cm I think) for cutting sheep in half, it just whizzes through them.
we have a reciprocating saw on hand too
and a front end loader on my tractor
that helps a ton especially with the scheduling side of things as its just intimidating to potentially mess up this many $$ worth of meat
I think the best way to handle the home kill guys is not watch them as i think he felt like he needed to explain himself rather than quickly finish the animal
the beef that came from that animal was great so at least it didnt have any toughening effect
For a jersey I was happy enough with the steak
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I either use a new hand saw, or my reciprocating one which I have taken all the paint off the blade. I do have a chainsaw where the oiler stopped working which I use if I have a few sheep to do or when I did a cow. most of the good stuff is in the hand quarters in a cow ( except the eye fillets etc) so it pays to take ya time with that bit. The homekill guy who did my most recent one charged about $4/kg for the chopping and packing. Only done 1 cow myself and that took me hours and hours to cut up. Done a heap of sheep but the moo is a bit of a different story.
That Jersey steak looks pretty good Bill. Some people are put off by the yellow fat but it all tastes the same I reckon. Good intramuscular fat in it by the look.
it was fat everywhere which was great
Im a little intimadated by the size and time it will take but Im pretty broke at the moment and I have a few people I can call on to give me a hand
If the nabour is ok with letting me use the chiller It will be a go
time to watch a few youtube videos tonite Id say
lol mate I found about 6hrs of utube vids to watch before I did my one, but thought if I watch them all that's an extra 6 hours to do the job if you get into trouble just seam out the muscle groups and cut them across the grain for ya steaks. Good to use a hook maybe a bit like a wool bale hook to pull at the muscle while you cut along the seam ( very thin white membrane which is between all the muscles).
Are those bull horns big enough to make a couple roaring horns @Bill999 ?
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