Butchery...

to be honest there's not a lot of detail to go into with rabbits/birds!

rabbits.. skin em, chop the forelegs off just behind the shoulders & split into 2 leg joints through the hips, back legs same leaving the saddle from the middle - 5 'joints'

birds are just birds, same as you'd skin or joint a chicken

it does cover all the different game birds though, in much the same sort of way as the fish book covers all the fish
 
Like Mark says Tony, but remember to keep the kidneys intact when you do the rabbits.

The BASC (if it's still called that?) used to do a great range of books on preparing and cooking game and wildfowl (might still have them, I'll have a dig around)
 
bored and going stir crazy with cabin fever so decided to kill some things. Rabbit and pheasant for tea!. skinned and boned the pheasant, trimmed all the meat of the bunny, chooped finely, mixed with a little sage, rolled into a ball then wrapped the boneless pheasant around it, tied it up and shoved it in the range...

so quick bunny butchery guide

fingers in and sperate the pelt from the flesh, comes away really easy, do it bothe sides of the body till your finger meet at the back
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chop its paws off and then its almost like undressing a doll, pull the pelt of each leg
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grab the pelt in one hand and the legs in t'other and pull the pelt down the body
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'undress' the front legs same as the back
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so the pelt is now just attached to the body around the neck......
so chop its 'ead off leaving pelt with head attached and skinned body

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chop the back legs off as 1:
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chop in half through the pelvis to give 2 legs
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chop in half just before rib cage to give a small loin joint then split the forelegs in half between the rib cage for 2 more
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fried the liver and kidneys with a couple of sage leaves and had them on toast!
 
there's a few more pheasies hanging in the porch to be delt with later

imagine its going to be tricky holding a camera in one hand with my other up its hint end

the one thats in the range I took the lazy option - no plucking no gutting

skinned it with feathers still attached then boned it with its vittals still in place!
 
With pheasant, just pluck a few feathers from the breast to reveal the skin. Tear the skin and pull apart to reveal the breast. Cut down either side of the breast bone and remove the breasts. I dont bother with the rest as there is very little meat.
 
With pheasant, just pluck a few feathers from the breast to reveal the skin. Tear the skin and pull apart to reveal the breast. Cut down either side of the breast bone and remove the breasts. I dont bother with the rest as there is very little meat.


Dont tell me you can clean shot a pheasant in the head Sean - if you can ,are you for "Hire" Ha Ha :o:o
 
that one was - right through the neck - about 250 yards, .22 rimfire, hollow point rounds.

got a rabbit right in one side of the head at the same range - dunno where the other side of its head went though :D
 
Dont tell me you can clean shot a pheasant in the head Sean - if you can ,are you for "Hire" Ha Ha :o:o

Done it many a time Brian, trouble is with the .22 or the .17hmr it tends to decapitate them - no good if you're gonna hang them by the neck :eek::eek: The hard part is getting the buggers to stay still long enough, not like a rabbit where you can whistle and they sit up nice for you. ;)
 
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