Dave Kannegaard keeps things simple when he butchers his deer. "I use a knife most Minnesotans already own," he said, "a fish filleting knife."
As Kannegaard spoke on a recent day, he and his son, Chuck, were preparing to process a registered buck a friend of theirs shot the night before. Though amateurs, the pair have butchered their deer and those killed by their hunting group the past seven years.
"We butcher our own deer for a lot of reasons," Chuck said. "One is cost. It just got to the point where bringing deer to a processor got pricey. Another reason is that by butchering our deer ourselves, we know what the end result is -- we know what we're eating."
Deer processing is being considered anew not only by an increasing number of hunters, including the Kannegaards, but by commercial butchers. Reports the past year about lead bullet fragments in venison have caused some professional processors who cut up deer for food shelves to get out of that game.
Requirements that processors serving food shelves attend special meat-cutting classes caused some of the butchers to quit -- a decision, some of them said, made easy by low profit margins in that part of the business.
Some hunters, meanwhile,who have switched from copper-jacketed lead bullets to all-copper bullets, or bonded bullets that don't fragment much, say they have no choice but to butcher their own deer. To do otherwise risks mixing their venison with lead-bullet-killed deer at commercial processors, most of whom combine trimmings from many deer to grind hamburger and sausage.
"Processing our own deer just makes us feel better," Chuck said. "Because we're doing it ourselves, we know we're not eating any bloodshot or damaged meat. We know we're eating deer we've shot, not those someone else has shot."
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