Help - Rearing to table and all points in between

CrealCritter

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So I'm sitting here writting down a long term plan to totally eleminate our dependency on store bought meat.

Currently my high-level plan looks like this
  • Animal husbandry
    • Care
    • Housing
  • Processing
    • Butchering
    • Aging
    • Curing
    • Smoking
  • Storage
    • Freezing
    • Canning
I know a lot more meat needs to added to this strawman of a plan, like a building to butcher in, maybe a walk in refrigerator to age meat and a smoke house to cure meat. But I need to start somewhere.

Please help me put some meat on this strawman's bones.

Thanks
 

CrealCritter

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Oh and we hunt deer also!

Yep so do we, my son in law bagged a nice fat doe. We found out if you hang them by the neck they are a lot easier to gut and skin than hanging them by the back legs.
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I love deer chops so we cut some. Look at that fat for a deer - they were delicious.
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We also found out a neck shot and they drop instantly and a lot less waste. We try and get as.much meat as possible of deer even grind up neck meat for tacos / burgers.
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CrealCritter

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I don't have any of that stuff. But small things like rabbits and chickens are no problem. You would be surprised how much meat you can get from rabbits! And it tastes great too

I hunt them right out back of my house. My property backs up to the Shawnee national Forest. They are so abundant here - I really don't see a need to raise them. Although I'm sure they would be a lot bigger if I raised my own. But the bottom line is shells are cheaper than feed :)
 

milkmansdaughter

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One "meat" option that's relatively easy, and is a great boost to the garden is raising fish. A 500 gal tank is big enough to put 50# or more of fish in your freezer (2 1/2# each) within 6-9 months. Then all the guts and water can be used to fertilize the garden. We're hoping to add tilapia this spring. We're planning fish for the summers, rabbits in the winter, chickens and eggs all year, with possibly one or two pigs next winter.
 

tortoise

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What is your weather like? I'm in WI, we get a few days of 33 - 40 degrees 24-hours in spring and fall. That's when we butcher large animals so they can hang outdoors (or a garage or wherever) safely. We have a cement block outbuilding that insulates against temperature fluctuations so we get a couple extra days that way.

We process chickens outdoors. We have a wood "garden bench" work surface outdoors. Hubby brings them inside gutted and skinned. I do the rest. I debone and can chickens. (They're best for canning at 1 - 2 years old, so this is great with heritage breeds)

We process meat on the dining room table. Venison, mutton, and lamb, so nothing really large.

My family was mostly meat-independent just with deer hunting, when we lived in town. Hung the deer in the garage, processed on the table. We have not ventured into pork or cured meats yet - probably won't ever. We receive ground beef from hubby's uncle who raises them. Other than getting bored with what we have and buying pork, bacon, or lunchmeat at the store, we are meat-independent.

Hubby watches auctions looking for a deli meat slicer. That's one thing we would add. We have a grinder - we grind a lot of the venison trimmings. We process venison all boneless, but once we started processing lamb we needed to get a bone saw for bone in cuts. They taste so much better!
 

Chic Rustler

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One "meat" option that's relatively easy, and is a great boost to the garden is raising fish. A 500 gal tank is big enough to put 50# or more of fish in your freezer (2 1/2# each) within 6-9 months. Then all the guts and water can be used to fertilize the garden. We're hoping to add tilapia this spring. We're planning fish for the summers, rabbits in the winter, chickens and eggs all year, with possibly one or two pigs next winter.



That's an awesome idea!
 

sumi

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There is some great ideas and info here! I raised and butchered pigs for a few years, mainly because I could and did sell most of the meat as an extra income for us. I bought in piglets and raised them to slaughter weight (around 6-8 months), took them to a butcher to process, as we were not set up for it. It was wonderful having our own home raised meat!

You didn't mention what types of meat you're after specifically. Pork, beef, lamb, rabbit, chicken, turkey, fish, goat, venison, all of the above? What are you thinking of raising yourself for meat, or are you just tossing around ideas for now to see what would work best? Which is fine too! :)

@Beekissed would be a good one to talk poultry with.
 
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