NEWHunter
Well-known member
I used several frozen jugs of water last year in my cooler. Left the house first thing Friday morning, shot it Monday morning, and when I started cutting it up Thursday night, everything was still cold. Turned out great.
There was no was melted ice to drain off, although the condensation was fairly substantial. The benefit to the jugs was no excess water and a cold cooler to drop the meat in. It was hot when I shot my antelope and took a while to get it packed out, so having a cold cooler was a big help.
This year though I will add dry ice once I arrive in WY to keep everything good and frozen and eliminate the condensation issue. Make sure there is no direct contact between the meat/cape and the dry ice.
There was no was melted ice to drain off, although the condensation was fairly substantial. The benefit to the jugs was no excess water and a cold cooler to drop the meat in. It was hot when I shot my antelope and took a while to get it packed out, so having a cold cooler was a big help.
This year though I will add dry ice once I arrive in WY to keep everything good and frozen and eliminate the condensation issue. Make sure there is no direct contact between the meat/cape and the dry ice.