I always figured that I would be excited, happy, have an adrennelin rush. When I shot my first deer I sat where I was for a few minutes thinking about how I now had to drag the deer out clean and process it. No elation whatsoever anyone else had similar experiences?
I still thoroughly enjoy deer hunting enough that my heart still kicks up when I see a buck approaching...I still get a great sense of accomplishment in taking a buck, particularly with a flintlock...and I'm ready for this fall's season to get here so I can go again.
However, after going through a number of years of dressing/skinning/butchering enough deer to prove my manhood, and without ever having developed a taste for venison personally, I reached a point where I began to tire of it.
Then I got an idea and haven't processed a deer in years now...I give them all away to needy families out in the country where I hunt.
So it's been a win-win situation...I enjoy a lot of time throughout the year planning, practicing, and deer hunting which is what I enjoy the most...and I get to provide a very appreciated grocery supplement to some needy families...and I no longer have to deal with the processing part of it.
I stop in and renew my contacts with a half dozen families in the weeks just before the season opens, make sure I have their phone numbers, if I shoot a deer all I do is drag out the deer, call in for my registration number, then call those families until I get a hit, and deliver it to them.
I think if I had to start personally processing every deer I took again, I'm not sure I'd keep deer hunting...as much as I love hunting, particularly with flintlocks, I'd probably just switch fulltime to small game like squirrels, rabbits, coyotes...or whatever.
So if you like deer hunting, but aren't crazy about the processing, you might consider donating them to needy families (or any families that might want them)...or you might try just going after small game for a season...spending a beautiful fall morning in the woods with a muzzleloader across your lap waiting for squirrels is not a bad way to enjoy the woods either.
:m2c: