The Native Americans figured this out long ago. Hidatsa boys on horse herd duty killed cowbirds and gophers with their bows and roasted them for lunch. Described by Wolf Chief:
"First we roasted the birds. A sharpened stick was thrust into the flesh at the vent and I held the bird over the fire with this stick, until it was roasted. The entrails were not drawn, neither were the feathers plucked.
"When roasted, I broke the bird open and threw the entrails away. I plucked out the wing feathers and stumps of the smaller feathers with my fingers and threw them away also. I ate the bird, biting the flesh off with my teeth; I did not pull it off with my fingers”¦.."
"Then we roasted gophers. First we opened the gophers and drew out the entrails with our fingers. The lips of the opening made in the carcass of the gopher for the purpose of removing the entrails, were now skewered together by a spit thrust in near the tail”¦..The carcass was held in the fire until the hair was singed, when it was taken out and scraped with a stick to remove the charred hair. It was then held about five inches from the fire, being turned now with one side, now with the other, toward the fire. The spit was held in the hand."
I think that gopher method would work great with squirrels, but we are probably too finicky to try that, aren't we? :grin:
Spence