Poke 'Em
Well-known member
All the other responses would indicate I got unlucky, but my moose was the worst tasting big game animal I've ever taken.
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Nice. I've been in Alaska 10 years and been hunting Moose 5. I've harvested 2, had opportunity on a nice big bull that never got a shot on. Then my buddy passed a 270 yard shot on a nice young bull. Last year hunted a new area and saw 0 bulls. I'm excited for this year!I lived in AK for 15 years and the only moose I harvested were cows. The bulls get pretty rank if you're hunting after the rut starts. They're also really reactive to anybody getting close. Numerous friends have horror stories of being charged.
I would put cow moose first (in the freezer right now, but going fast) with cow elk close behind. Pig, mid-west whitetail, and doe antelope are also way up there. Bull moose/elk and buck antelope eat just fine too (tenderized) and in our family we enjoy the differences in each meat, some stronger and richer, some more mild. Mule deer is the only meat we don't really like so that goes straight to jerky & summer sausage. Strange how a bag or two of jerky or a sausage seem to disappear each week after our adult kids come for Sunday dinner.Hey guys, I just finished watching the latest YouTube upload on the MEAT EATER channel; “ Yukon giants, northern Alaskan Moose part 2”.
Spoiler alert… They got a good size bull.
But that’s not the reason for my post. The reason is that I’ve never actually eaten moose meat, and I hear that it is absolutely delicious. Apparently, some people love it more than elk!
I really wanna try moose meat and the only way to do it is to harvest a moose. My resident state is Utah and that’s basically a long climb to get a moose tag.
Would anyone have any suggestions for someone with no points harvesting a younger cow moose sooner than later AND which states would be best to try to accomplish this?
Ideally, if I could go the self-guided route that would be better. I’m not really interested in spending a ton of money… The experience of a self guided hunt is what makes harvesting the animal so rewarding for me.
I wonder why you can shoot a bull in rut and he stinks, yet fine eating.40+ years, my kids, grand kids, raised on moose meat. Young bulls, mature bulls all good. Most years we get one bull, sometimes two, occasionally three bulls. Field care and handling determine the quality of meat. Each time I travel out of Alaska, I'm asked "bring some moose"
It’s the same in my house! Moose and younger bison is my favorite. Elk is up there too.Moose is yummy. We have elk and moose in our freezer right now. The moose inventory gets raided long before elk.
I’m so new to western hunting. I’m literally only interested in getting a cow moose just for the meat.It’s the same in my house! Moose and younger bison is my favorite. Elk is up there too.
Check out Colorado. At least historically it hasn’t been overly difficult for a nonresident to get a tag. Could be getting more difficult as time goes on though. Not once in a lifetime for cows. Spendy tag though.I’m so new to western hunting. I’m literally only interested in getting a cow moose just for the meat.
I hear it’s really difficult to draw a cow moose tag and that it is a once-in-a-lifetime in each state?
Am I getting incorrect advice?