npaden
Well-known member
Okay. I've never gone more than an hour or two from shooting an animal to recovering it. This weekend my son shot an elk at 5 pm Saturday and we weren't able to find him until 4:30 pm on Sunday. It was 20 degrees or less the entire time and either dark, misting freezing rain or snowing the entire time we were looking for him. The hit was fairly far back and I'm guessing it took him at least a couple hours to die but not sure any more or less from that.
When we found him he was stiff from rigor and starting to bloat. He smelled bad. The shot was at least partially in the stomach and when skinning him some air released that had been trapped under the hide. He was on his side so I was hoping that at least the part on top would be okay. I salvaged all of the meat even the tenderloins and we packed them out got them cooled down and into coolers.
Some of the meat has a sweet smell to it. Some of the meat had the normal red meat color and doesn't smell. The meat that smells the worst (sweet smell not really bad) had more of a brown color to it. (The tenderloins smelled the worst). The meat was still warm when I was cutting it up. Right around the hip socket on both hind quarters had that some brown colored meat that had a smell to it.
This bull had a massive body and there is a ton of meat. The back straps looked fine and the top front shoulder seemed okay but the bottom front shoulder had some stuff that ended up kind of inflating and then deflating and didn't really stink but looked bad and I trimmed that off already.
I've got everything in coolers at home now and am trying to decide what to do. Just do a smell test of each piece and only save the stuff that doesn't have that sweet smell? Butcher it all?
I've had meat before with a very slight sweet smell that turned out fine. I've just never dealt with meat that didn't get taken care of timely so have no experience here.
Any advice would be appreciated.
Thanks, Nathan
When we found him he was stiff from rigor and starting to bloat. He smelled bad. The shot was at least partially in the stomach and when skinning him some air released that had been trapped under the hide. He was on his side so I was hoping that at least the part on top would be okay. I salvaged all of the meat even the tenderloins and we packed them out got them cooled down and into coolers.
Some of the meat has a sweet smell to it. Some of the meat had the normal red meat color and doesn't smell. The meat that smells the worst (sweet smell not really bad) had more of a brown color to it. (The tenderloins smelled the worst). The meat was still warm when I was cutting it up. Right around the hip socket on both hind quarters had that some brown colored meat that had a smell to it.
This bull had a massive body and there is a ton of meat. The back straps looked fine and the top front shoulder seemed okay but the bottom front shoulder had some stuff that ended up kind of inflating and then deflating and didn't really stink but looked bad and I trimmed that off already.
I've got everything in coolers at home now and am trying to decide what to do. Just do a smell test of each piece and only save the stuff that doesn't have that sweet smell? Butcher it all?
I've had meat before with a very slight sweet smell that turned out fine. I've just never dealt with meat that didn't get taken care of timely so have no experience here.
Any advice would be appreciated.
Thanks, Nathan