Showing posts with label homesteading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homesteading. Show all posts

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Skinning A Deer

Warning: This post contains graphic, kind of gruesome images. 
If you don't want to see raw meat or blood or a deer carcass...don't read this.



For as long as I can remember, my Dad has been a hunter. He hunts elk and deer every year and is truly respectful of God's creation and a lover of the outdoors. When I was a kid, we'd all go camping in the mountains for two weeks and my Mom and us kids and my cousins and Aunt would stay in camp during the day while my Dad and Uncle would go across the river and over the ridge up into the wilderness; hunting for the canny, elusive elk. It was awesome.
I remember waking up early in the morning while it was still dark and peeking out of the tent and seeing Dad huddled near the campfire, the smell of woodsmoke and coffee in the air while sparks flew up into the blackness of the sky and the sound of caps from the muzzleloader rifles snapped in the stillness.
I wrapped up in a blanket and sat in a chair near the fire, my breath making a cloud in the frigid frosty morning. I sipped a cup of cocoa to warm up and listened to hunting stories, anticipating the afternoon when Dad would come back to camp with an elk in the back of his truck. Sometimes he did, sometimes he came home empty handed but the experience far outweighed the fact of whether or not he got any meat.

It's so cool to hand down these memories to my kids, and to see them experience the same things I did that I consider to be almost lost in our current culture of fast food, factory farming and immediate gratification.

My Dad already got an elk this year, up in the mountains about 4 hours from here and its at the processor right now.
He was at work a few days ago out in the woods here on the island and saw some deer up on a hill, and took the opportunity to shoot a nice little doe. During hunting season, what better job could you have than logging in the woods and getting to bring your gun to work so that when you see a deer all you have to do is shoot it? Pretty cool.

Anyway, he shot it and gutted the doe in the woods and brought her home for us.
I've grown up helping skin deer, and it was awesome for Tim and the kids to be able to experience and learn how to skin a deer since Tim wants to hunt next year.

These aren't exactly instructions on how to skin a deer, because I didn't do the whole thing by myself and am afraid I'd forget something vital to tell you. So this is what I remember about how we skinned this little doe. If you need instructions on how to skin a deer, you can check out Sofya's great post at The Girl's Guide to Guns and Butter- she has way more experience than I do, and there's instructions on how to butcher a deer on there as well. Our deer is still hanging outside, aging and drying out for a few more days before we butcher it.

When she first saw the deer, Ellie said, "Let's eat it for dinner tonight!"  :)



The first thing you do when you go to skin a deer is to take the legs off. Make sure you're using a very sharp knife. You start at the knee, and find the cartilage around it and cut, being careful not to cut the bone or the hair of the deer. This dulls the knife really fast. Also be careful not to cut your fingers.


Once you've cut around the outside, bend the knee and cut the rest of the cartilage. Then snap the knee off.


Tim's first time skinning a deer. He did awesome!

The kids had fun playing with the deer legs. :)


Next, cut slits through the hide along the front legs of the deer to the chest,
 so that when you get to that point the skin comes off easier.
Hang the deer by its neck and start skinning from the neck down.
Pull the hide gently away, and cut at the thin white fat between the skin and the meat and the hide just peels away easily. Be careful not to cut too close to the hide, or you'll cut a hole in it, or too much into the meat. Just go slowly and take your time. There's no hurry.





Once you get to this point, you can usually pull the hide down and it will just peel off by itself. Grab the edges of the hide and just pull gently, trimming with the knife if needed. Pull it down to the tail, and cut off the tail.


Then, continue pulling the hide down, using your knife if needed to help it along, until the hide comes off the legs. If you want to save the hide to tan it you can, or you can just bury it deep in a hole with the head and legs so the coyotes don't get it.




Now to the kind of gruesome part.
If you shot the deer with a gun and not a bow, you'll more than likely have some bloodshot meat. This is where the bullet went in and came out. You need to cut out all of that icky, bloody meat so the blood doesn't seep down into the meat and ruin it.



Once it's all cut out, cut down the breastbone with either a hacksaw or a knife, depending on how big your deer is and how sharp your hunting knives are. Since this was a young doe, Dad just used his knife.



Then you can go ahead and turn the deer upside down to finish drying out- thread a rope between it's tendons on the back legs and tie them up.


 Then untie the head and let it hang down towards the ground.  This is what the rope looks like threaded through the tendons.



Lastly, cut off the head. Start with a knife and go around the neck until you get to the spine, then use a hacksaw to get through the bone.


The kids thought the head was really cool, especially since they got to touch the deer's eye and pet its fur.




And that, my friends, is how you skin a deer.



We hung the deer inside one of our shipping containers we use for storing tools (kinda like a garage) and we'll leave it there for a week to age, if it stays cold enough.
We'll be butchering the meat ourselves here in a few days, and I'll try to do a post on that too.
I hope I didn't gross anyone out too much! It's really a fun process, and you appreciate the food more when you know where it comes from and how much work it takes to get it to the edible point. I'm thankful I grew up doing this, and thankful that my kids will grow up knowing how to skin a deer and make it into food for their future families too. :)


Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Foraging: Wild Rose Hips

A couple of weeks ago our family took a walk down the road to get some fresh air, and ran across a whole bunch of wild rose hips.





I immediately wanted to pick them all, but had nothing to put them in, so I resolved that we'd come back and get them in a few days, and went home to research how to preserve rosehips and what to use them for.
If you want to read a more in-depth description of what rosehips do for your health, go here.



Rose hips are really high in vitamin C and can be made into tea, jelly or oil to help bolster the immune system. I thought that since it's fall and the beginning of the blustery, rainy season that we're bound to get a cold here or there, so why not make some tea to help us stay healthy??

One cool gray afternoon, I gathered up the kids and Grandma (my mom) and we went rose hip picking.
We had fun! 



Some of the rose hips were low enough for the kids to pick, and we snacked on the blackberries remaining on the nearby blackberry bushes. Some of the bushes were still flowering!



Once we got about 4 or 5 cups of rose hips and there weren't really many more that we could reach, we came home and I spread them out on a cookie sheet to dry. The process takes a few weeks, so they're not dry quite yet. They look so pretty though, and I can't wait to try them in some tea!




The mornings here have been foggy and cool, and it's so beautiful!!
I love seeing these girls out the kitchen window when I'm stirring the sugar into my coffee:


I know- more cow pictures! I just can't get enough of them!!

Have you ever done any foraging?? What did you get, and what did you do with it? I'd love to hear! 

This post is shared at Frugal Days, Sustainable Ways.


Thursday, October 11, 2012

Blanching Corn

Every year my Grandpa has a huge garden.
He just turned 85, but he still plots out a nice garden and every year he gives my parents a bunch of veggies from it.
Summer and Winter squashes, cucumbers, peas or green beans, and corn among other things.

One of my favorite fall activities that I remember from my childhood is shucking and blanching corn.
I honestly don't really like to eat corn on the cob, but I enjoy pulling the long green husks off and picking the silk out of the crevices between the kernels and watching those golden ears boil away, only to be plunged into icy cold water to cool and then be put in bags and stowed away in the freezer for wintertime.

Since we live here in Washington now, I get to teach my kids how to take care of the corn Grandpa Larry brings over!


Eliana managed to shuck two ears of corn before her hands got tired.

Ethan did a great job making sure all of the silk got off the ears of corn!





Here are a few pictures of the process:

Half Shucked Corn

A close-up of the silk

All shucked and ready to be blanched

We let the corn boil for 3 minutes...

Then put it into cold water to stop the cooking process.

After it's cooled, it's ready to be put in bags..

And then go into the chest freezer on the back porch.

That's how it's done, folks!
 We'll sure enjoy eating nice sweet corn at dinner time during the cold winter evenings.
I'm using up some frozen corn from last year's garden with dinner tonight and making mexican rice with it.
What is your favorite way to eat corn? I'd love to hear some ideas for new meals!

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Of Children and Chickens

It's been really sunny and hot lately and we've been spending a good bit of our time outside before it gets TOO hot to do anything. Playing outside and holding chickies is pretty how we spend our afternoons around here.

( We've nearly hit the 100 degree mark already. In May. Eek.)

I thought I'd share some cute pictures of the fun the kids have been having, so here are ...the children and the chickens. :)







Ellie listening to music at the Levitt Shell

The Levitt Shell









Saturday, April 21, 2012

Chickie And Chicken Coop Update

Hi!

So, things around here have been rather crazy this past week, with hubby starting a new job and the adjusting to a new schedule that comes along with that, then I've been under the weather and trying to get better, then poor little Ethan got sick last night and I was sick this morning with a terrible headache and nausea...so I've not had a lot of time to blog lately.

Sorry if you've been on the edge of your seat waiting for that next amazing post. ;)
(I know you have. hee hee)

Here's a chickie update:

The chicks are getting bigger. A lot bigger. Who knew they grew so quickly?



They're getting their feathers in and are looking quite awkward these days.






They're also getting really spunky and roosting on top of whatever they can find.
We took them outside yesterday as it was nice and warm and I needed to clean their bin they're currently living in, and they had so much fun eating bugs and grass and practicing flying out in the bright sunshine.




Today hubby is working on the chicken coop some more- he's not had time to this week as things (see above) have been a little bit different than usual.



Hopefully we can get it done in time for us to go on vacation to Oklahoma in the second week of May, because those chickies are fast outgrowing their current home!

I hope you're having a wonderful Saturday!!