Sheltowee
Well-known member
Interesting. Could be a combination of the cortisol release, breaking him down/deboning him quickly and icing the meat? Or he might have just been a tough, rutty animal. One of the most tender animals I've ever eaten was a pronghorn buck that we had quartered and on ice-- but not deboned-- so quickly the meat fibers were still twitching.I had hit him in the high shoulder / spine in the first shot. He dropped and we gave him 20 min or so. When we walked up to him he tried getting up and I had to shoot him in the neck.
Took a couple quick photos and started breaking him down. From time of death to the first hind going into the snow, maybe 20-25 minutes.