What do you do with the quarry you’ve taken down?

Shown here with my silver-handled, I don't touch Vermin, sling'em-back-upslopers,... for the Coyotes.
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I’m right there with you on not touching rats. They’re so foul that I don’t even want to give them as dinner to any living creature, pest or not. Just burn them afterward. Think i have some similar grill pliers around the bbq, you sparked an idea :)
 
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I won't kill a squirrel I don't intend to eat. I will shoot invasive European starlings and trash them.

I have eaten pigeons and doves. They taste the same. Don't have any ground squirrels.
I respect that stance—it's great you prioritize using what you take.

Over here, we can’t shoot starlings since they’re not seen as pests. If we could, I’d love to keep their wings for fly-fishermen—those feathers are perfect for tying small wet flies and soft hackles.
 
Rabbit and squirrel go in the stew, smaller critters feed the kitties
Squirrel stew? Ewww! 😂 Not for me, but rabbit stew? Now that's yummy!

Fun thread, thx for sharing.
 
Sounds like a great setup! I love eating doves too, but over here they’ve been taken off the general license, so sadly, no more dove dinners for us.

Leaving starlings and ground squirrels for the local critters seems like a practical way to handle things. Do you shoot on farmland? Are coyotes not considered pests?
I’m glad I don’t have to handle the ground squirrels. Here in California they are known to carry the fleas that cause bubonic plague. I don’t get a where near them. I’m not shooting on a farm. The owner/foreman haven’t said the coyotes aren’t doing any damage other than critter clean up. There’s also lots of mourning doves and crows. Neither one can be hunted with N airgun so thy get a pass
 
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I eat squirrels. I keep the 4 legs and the back part of the back. I cook them in an electric pressure cooker with steam for 1 hour. They come out very tender. Then I either dip them in bbq sauce as I eat the pieces or I wait for the meat to cool a little and strip it off the bones putting it in a tupperware container to eat over the next several days. Looks a bit like pulled pork. It's hard to get all the tiny bones, however. Tastes great. I like mac and cheese and broccoli to go with my squirrel bbq.
 
Depends on the kill. Ground squirrels make coyotes happy and so do European starling and house sparrows. collared doves make great dove nuggets. when in season cottontails get taken and eaten As well.
I use the Ground Squirrels for Buzzard, Raptor food with the occasional Coyote if it happens to find it. If I happen to seen the Coyote well it's going to become Buzzard food.
 
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I’m glad I don’t have to handle the ground squirrels. Here in California they are known to carry the fleas that cause bubonic plague. I don’t get a where near them. I’m not shooting on a farm. The owner/foreman haven’t said the coyotes aren’t doing any damage other than critter clean up. There’s also lots of mourning doves and crows. Neither one can be hunted with N airgun so thy get a pass
I use a grabber with some screws poking thought to grab the GS's, I'm not touching them either.
 
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I mainly hunt gray squirrel. Some I eat myself. Some get swallowed whole by my exotic pets...yellow anacondas and a boa constrictor.
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I’m curious about what happens to your kills once the dust settles. Do you burn it, bury it, or give it a new purpose?

Here in the UK, we enjoy rabbits and wood pigeons (and my personal favourite, collared doves, though they’re now off the legal menu). Some folks eat squirrels, but not me—I send corvid feathers and squirrel tails to a fly-fishing merchant.

Is it similar across the pond? You shoot a wide variety of quarry, and I’d love to know what you do with it. I’ve heard iguanas are often turned into leather goods or eaten, which I find quite fascinating.


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PBC, hello, most of the pigeons and sparrows that I recover are given to the farmers cats. One in particular follows me around as soon as I park near her barn !
Groundhogs get left in a couple spots to go for whomever gets there first. Same for crows , starlings & rats. The cats want nothing to do w/ dead rats , unless they catch them ! There is a compost pile if need be.
 
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I eat squirrels harvested on public lands, but the ones caught on my property get left for the raccoon/ coyote cleanup crew.

Groundhogs get tossed in a garbage bag and disposed of. Occasionally if they get taken in a field with high grass, I'll leave them where they lay, and let the turkey vultures finish the job.
 
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PBC, hello, most of the pigeons and sparrows that I recover are given to the farmers cats. One in particular follows me around as soon as I park near her barn !
Groundhogs get left in a couple spots to go for whomever gets there first. Same for crows , starlings & rats. The cats want nothing to do w/ dead rats , unless they catch them ! There is a compost pile if need be.
Sounds like you've got quite the arrangement with the local feline patrol!
 
I eat squirrels harvested on public lands, but the ones caught on my property get left for the raccoon/ coyote cleanup crew.

Groundhogs get tossed in a garbage bag and disposed of. Occasionally if they get taken in a field with high grass, I'll leave them where they lay, and let the turkey vultures finish the job.
I’m sure you’ve got some tricks, but squirrel doesn’t have me rushing to the kitchen—a lot of effort for little, stringy meat. Prolly haven't tried the right recipe. For the groundhogs, do you think burying them might be an option? I can’t imagine the recycling plant is thrilled with them showing up from the bags?
 
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So, you sell them off to a company that processes the iguanas? Interesting. I’d love to know what happens next—how they handle them, what they’re used for, and what the whole process looks like. Must be quite the operation.
We have several buyers throughout the states and locally. Some want them as feed for gator/hog farms, others for bait during stone crab season, hog hunting, and other for whatever personal reason. Some eat them, others make things out of them.