How to get deer up a hill by yourself
#12
#13
Fork Horn
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Rockingham NC
Posts: 203
LOL this is my way of doing it too. Think I may have to give the pulley system a try. Thanks for posting!
#14
Giant Nontypical
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 5,425
I don't drag out of the National Forest down here in NC...I call the deer in and get my registration number, take my rachet pulley out of my backpack and bone the deer out...I load this in my backpack and walk out with it...
Why drag the carcass out when you have to dispose of it later?? Leave it where the other critters can enjoy...
Why drag the carcass out when you have to dispose of it later?? Leave it where the other critters can enjoy...
#15
Giant Nontypical
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 5,425
It's amazing how some states hold on to stupid laws like that...If you are "back in" there is no reason to drag that carcass out...It's much easier and faster (the meat will be better) to butcher in the field and bring it out...Can you imagine doing that with and elk???
#16
Uphill
Great plans here!
I usually lash the deer to a 3-4 inch limb snug to the deer's underside.
Drape an orange vest high up, grab the head end of the pole and up and over the shoulder it goes.
Then dragging is no more than short hauls and long rests.
Had to do this in Luray VA a few times. Lots of ravines there. The first year I did that I came up on a still that had been trashed by some Revenuers years before. Interesting find.
I usually lash the deer to a 3-4 inch limb snug to the deer's underside.
Drape an orange vest high up, grab the head end of the pole and up and over the shoulder it goes.
Then dragging is no more than short hauls and long rests.
Had to do this in Luray VA a few times. Lots of ravines there. The first year I did that I came up on a still that had been trashed by some Revenuers years before. Interesting find.
#18
No, never thought about that. But with my way you half the weight, so basically you would be doing the same, and if you wanted to carry more rope, you could add a different pulley and quarter the weight. Hey, where there is a will, there is a way.
Hell, if I really wanted to, I could keep a few hundred feet of rope, grab a buddy, and winch them up 25 feet at a time while I just steer the deer away from trees and rocks. I like the loner method though, it's all part of the process to me.
Also, I should note, once you set up this sytem, you just take the ratchet off the tree, the pulley and rope stay on it and you just go to a higher spot and reratchet, you don't have to do anything other setup with the rope or the deer. It's really not that bad, the drag is the easy part, the rifle, the sticks, the bag, and walking the hill twice is the pain in the butt of it.
#20
That's a very ingenious idea, but too time consuming for me. I'd rather just do the drag a bit, rest, and drag some more routine. Most of the distance that I have to drag is fairly level, but it's usually about a half mile or so out to my truck. At 55 I often ask myself how much longer can I do this? lol