Foxyboy I've seen this somewhere before on a video, do you know where or explain to me how you do it please? Cheers
For chrissake! Sitting having my usual preprandial Rioja before the roast chicken and I read this. Don’t think I will ever, ever, look at a cork in the same way.Wine corks in your pockets,point it like a rocket, fit it in the socket,cut around the sprocket, and don't lick your digets.![]()
It works on chickens too, I believe.For chrissake! Sitting having my usual preprandial Rioja before the roast chicken and I read this. Don’t think I will ever, ever, look at a cork in the same way.
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Dead man valking liebling! You are on mein liszt for sure!It works on chickens too, I believe.![]()
Or see post #12 on page 1Et voila![]()
A hultafors craftsman precision (great on muntjac) for the impecunious,Will do very well Precision Knife PK GH | Hultafors ToolsDon’t attempt anal tunnelling (can’t believe I just wrote that!) unless you’ve invested in a £475 Emberleaf.
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More stuff to carry but has anyone ever tried one?
The less I take out shooting with me the happier I am, too much stuff is just a faff.
Do you split pelvis in field, and if so do you just use a castrom/folding saw? I know its a preferred method in Scotland.I frequently shoot for others who deal with the carcass selling etc. So over time i have done most ways they all work but tunnelling can easy go wrong . In the field its very much minimum intervention ie bleed and green gralloch. I dont favour tunnelling, splitting the bone and lifting out gives a cleaner carcass , far , far cleaner if you mess up tunnelling.
suspended field gralloch with roe and smaller is ideal for most folks who dont have a larder and are taking the carcass for family and friends. Just make sure the walkers etc don't bump into your gut pile eh!
no its bare minimum in the field, hand saw at the larder in a cradle . pluck remains in the beast but the rest goes and each is winched in . I am a firm believer in minimum work in the field , though fully understand some folks have no larder ( I dont at my own home ) Though i can borrow one if i really need and frankly on the larger species or a reasonable number of carcasses I would have toDo you split pelvis in field, and if so do you just use a castrom/folding saw? I know its a preferred method in Scotland.
I was once shown a tunnelling technique by a surgeon who did a lot of bowel surgery - it's the way they did some procedures in theatreI'll try my best to describe it in words but I should really take some pics sometime... It's like a slightly more refined / cleaner way of doing this:
1. Open the main body cavity and work all the poo down the colon away from the anus.
2. Use a pair of "lane tissue forceps" to grasp and hold either side of the anus - this kind of thing but cheaper stuff is easily available. I've got several pairs that live in stalking jackets Lane Tissue Forceps With 1 Into 2 Teeth And Box Joint 200mm | Health and Care
3. Cut around the anus, knife slightly facing out into pelvic cavity so you don't nick anything. Holding the anus with the forceps means you can keep some tension on the skin and make it easier to cut cleanly.
4. Once you've cut the skin around the anus, withdraw it and keep trimming around the rectum as you withdraw it. Similar concept to the Jelen video linked above.
5. Once you've freed it all off around the inside of the pelvis then it will drop back into the body cavity without any pulling, no poo squeezed out and no burst bladder. You can cable tie it if you want for belt and braces approach.
Sensible. This is why i dont split in the field. Thanks for input, good to know how others do itno its bare minimum in the field, hand saw at the larder in a cradle . pluck remains in the beast but the rest goes and each is winched in . I am a firm believer in minimum work in the field , though fully understand some folks have no larder ( I dont at my own home ) Though i can borrow one if i really need and frankly on the larger species or a reasonable number of carcasses I would have to