Assuming this was being done at the larder rather than in the field, would there be any benefit to cutting down both sides and lifting the whole sternum out at this stage?Just so. Löwe, or other anvil-type shears.
Assuming this was being done at the larder rather than in the field, would there be any benefit to cutting down both sides and lifting the whole sternum out at this stage?Just so. Löwe, or other anvil-type shears.
Thanks for the mention @Grand Slam! There’s also the Skinning and gralloching knife with saw which is a very handy multi tasking tool in the gralloching/skinning/chest splitting arena.@Game Larder stock those very items, Cutting Shears - Game Larder
They also do a larger version. Yet to try them but may give them a go.
Very much like yourself, I am fortunate enough to be able to carry out a suspended gralloch on all the deer I shoot and always split the chest before lowering into the truck. The pelvis remains intact until butchering. Anus is removed as part of the gralloch along with the bladder, although pretty sure I read somewhere on here that some Game dealers want the bladder leaving in so it dries up a bit and reduces the risk of contamination on the carcass.I just split the chest in the field as part of a suspended gralloch (Roe), makes a cleaner job to get it all out in the field and into a clean roe sack. I just go straight down with my knife. Once back at the larder I split the pelvis with a saw and remove the anus and bladder. Clean and easy with minimal larder clean up too.
So don’t cut the chest before you unzip the guts. That way you have a free hand to steady the carcass when sawingI guess it's easier to cut a few ribs where they join sternum than go through the whole sternum end to end.
But I agree, I don't know anyone who does it and I hate it when I drift off centre even a touch!! It also makes it harder to make sure you get that last rib at the front of the rib cage (more an issue for suspended, but try cutting that once you've got the stomach / guts etc hanging over the top of it).

For a suspended gralloch I would cut through the sternum while the animal was still on the ground, and then do the rest once it was hanging.So don’t cut the chest before you unzip the guts. That way you have a free hand to steady the carcass when sawing
Having had the error of my ways pointed out to me many years by a esteemed colleague, I now always feel up the sternum to the top V-shape cartilage, cut the fur with a small nick downwards, switch blade to unzipped, run that down to chin, reverse the blade to cut the meat covering the sternum to create a saw line, and the saw that downwards. Only then do I open up the abdomen and lower the guts. It done rightly, on does/hinds I end up with a head still connected to the oesophagus and windpipe with all the red and green organs attached.![]()
Thanks for the mention @Grand Slam! There’s also the Skinning and gralloching knife with saw which is a very handy multi tasking tool in the gralloching/skinning/chest splitting arena.![]()
Just bought one of these as it looks very useful for the upcoming for season.
Given VSS suffers from chronic pain then the less work the better scrabbling around on the ground.I wouldn’t say it’s double handling. They tend to be on the ground after I’ve shot them.
The saw section looks to be in the wrong place to me - too far down the blade. When sawing a chest open I invariably use the el cheapo Bushwear saw and try to maker the minimum depth stroke possible. otherwise you puncture the heart et al.
They work just fine Peter been using my F.Dick one on Big fallow and reds at the tail end of last season and since the start of this one.The saw section looks to be in the wrong place to me - too far down the blade. When sawing a chest open I invariably use the el cheapo Bushwear saw and try to maker the minimum depth stroke possible. otherwise you puncture the heart et al.
