There are other dealers..So for each stag (say 80kg average) they deduct a tenner for fuel. IIRC their wagon holds 60 animals, how much diesel does it use? I smell something other than rutting stag.....
You smell profit , and a lot of it.So for each stag (say 80kg average) they deduct a tenner for fuel. IIRC their wagon holds 60 animals, how much diesel does it use? I smell something other than rutting stag.....
My thoughts alsoSo for each stag (say 80kg average) they deduct a tenner for fuel. IIRC their wagon holds 60 animals, how much diesel does it use? I smell something other than rutting stag.....
Not where I am Griff , price is pish and turned to selling them with the skin on and giving the buyer name of a butcher , I’m quite happy giving the roe to the dog . Scottish wild venison and all this pish I listen to about promoting it , pish , but I’m quite happy giving out this negativity . The only thing I promote is the price I get and the price in the supermarkets and even butcher shops . The other thing I found out was that the guy who drove for highland game was getting 10p p/k for picking up as a bonus so the more he picked up the more he made . Good for himThere are other dealers..
I’ve mentioned how hard it was getting to move deer on for a price worth doing to be met with…What foks me off is seeing it in the local butcher at £60/kg and little old ladies paying through the nose to treat her husband. We need to starve the market to drive up the price I think
Some game dealers do individual prices with people that shoot with copper and consistently provide clean well presented carcassesIf the game dealers paid good prices for good carcasses and refused to take any badly shot carcasses, do you think it would make people think twice about where they put the bullet?
That would be an acceptable price.Some game dealers do individual prices with people that shoot with copper and consistently provide clean well presented carcasses
£2.20kg is the best I know of
People would pay attention to bullet placement and being clean with the gralloch.That would be an acceptable price.
The post I put up shows prices and reductions for damage up front that my local dealer pays.If the game dealers paid good prices for good carcasses and refused to take any badly shot carcasses, do you think it would make people think twice about where they put the bullet?
Not quite correct, £1.25kg for stags/bucksMC Kelly, £1.20 for reds.![]()
You are 100% bob on!Profit needs to be there for a large scale producer though, no ones going to buy say a roe carcass for £40 in todays day and age and sell it for £80, financially It makes no sense.
Too even break even In equipment cleaning, and labor, and eventual disposal of bones you need to charge upwards of £150-200
I dont find that unfair game dealers charge silly prices, have the facilities, stations, and paperwork to back them, I understand its much harder up here in Scotland but if your in england there's not much stopping you producing your own meat If you want too and "making" that profit (in return... spending less time stalking!)
Super markets again are the third, maybe even fourth step in that process, the price increases (unfortuanaly) at least In my super market though I've seen a lot more advertisement of non premium products (e.g grill steaks) for 3 quid for two, that's actually not terrible at all.