I don't think that is necessarily true. Lots of ranches here in Texas have them and I have never met anyone that liked them. And a good chunk of those are corn and protein fed. Ours were free range out by Van Horn.Very good. I just killed one and am aging it for 14 days. Then everything is basically done in a slow cooker. Very tasty table fare. Guides are lazy and don’t want to do more than cut heads off. They will tell you anything to get out of work.
Not going to question motives or reasons for leaving it, but IMO they are leaving some of the best tasting meat there is. I realize Big Rams are really tough, so just burger them.I don't think that is necessarily true. Lots of ranches here in Texas have them and I have never met anyone that liked them. And a good chunk of those are corn and protein fed. Ours were free range out by Van Horn.
Unfortunately they are just justifying not paying for processing the meat and not wanting to deal with them. Have had the discussion with those types many times. they always are either going off of hearsay or thinking its gonna taste like a beef porter house. those same people would be leaving elk and deer to rot if it was not required they pack them out.I don't think that is necessarily true. Lots of ranches here in Texas have them and I have never met anyone that liked them. And a good chunk of those are corn and protein fed. Ours were free range out by Van Horn.
Have to disagree here. The folks I know that have paid $3-5k to hunt them here in Texas wouldn’t blink about $500-750 to process them. Different pocketbooks in the high fence hunting world. Some of these same guys spend $15-30k on elk and stag in Texas.Unfortunately they are just justifying not paying for processing the meat and not wanting to deal with them. Have had the discussion with those types many times. they always are either going off of hearsay or thinking its gonna taste like a beef porter house. those same people would be leaving elk and deer to rot if it was not required they pack them out.
I grew up in west Texas and about every mexican kitchen in the area FORBID the meat from even coming into their kitchen.I don't think that is necessarily true. Lots of ranches here in Texas have them and I have never met anyone that liked them. And a good chunk of those are corn and protein fed. Ours were free range out by Van Horn.
I was trying to be nice. Most are justifying not wanting to deal with it out of laziness. Several kinds of sausage (chorizo, breakfast, hot links, andouille, boudin) that you could make with Barbary or elk adding pork fat and you couldn't tell the difference. I have eaten and processed dozens of them. I get it if someone doesn't like venison. However, that doesn't mean you leave them to rot. You pay to process them into sausage, or snack sticks and give them away. All the rest is hearsay and excuses.Have to disagree here. The folks I know that have paid $3-5k to hunt them here in Texas wouldn’t blink about $500-750 to process them. Different pocketbooks in the high fence hunting world. Some of these same guys spend $15-30k on elk and stag in Texas.
Just speaking from personal experience. I don’t think mule deer is very good either.
I Agee, some guides don’t even have a pack to get the meat out because they don’t want to spend a day packing out of a tough location, if they can’t drive and load it’s uneatableVery good. I just killed one and am aging it for 14 days. Then everything is basically done in a slow cooker. Very tasty table fare. Guides are lazy and don’t want to do more than cut heads off. They will tell you anything to get out of work.
The birds won't eat them if that tells you anything lol...
Private land free range hunts for native and exotic game on nearly 1 million acres in west Texas.
300k acres for free range auodad, mule deer, elk, whitetail and all the Texas exotics.