I thought these were a joke. I was given one after a guy used one after I tracked a deer for him and I was amazed. I have used it on three deer and I can say it works great for me on deer. Have not tried it on a hog yet but I will. It probably saves me a few minutes but more imporantly a few nicks and cuts on my fingers from bone fragments. Anyone tried one on a hog?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Buttout tool review
Collapse
X
-
Used it on deer and hogs. It is standard equipment in my bag now. I have always been a "reamer", but did carry a pelvis saw for the occasional use, but now, I only carry the buttout tool. It works well on both deer and hogs... sort of got a chuckle from the guys in the camphouse when I told them the morning after I'd dressed a deer... "Dang it, I forgot to clean my buttout"....
Comment
-
Please explain how they work...and what you do with it once you pull it out?
On hogs, I just cut around the low side of the hole and up around the top of the tail, leaving the tail attached as a handle to pull the whole section down through the gap once you break the pelvis bone. Am I doing it wrong?
Comment
-
Originally posted by leebtattoos View Postwe got one but havent use it yet. me and some buddies where talking the other day and thought it was pretty funny that some complain about tasteless pictures but they shove a plastic thing up a deers butt. just sayin'. kinda funny. not to stir any proverbial pots
Trailboss
Comment
-
I don't even gut deer or hogs. I cut the hind quarters off at the joints and don't have saw the pelvis either. I always hang them by there head also. I used to gut them until I a friend of mine showed me how to clean them this way. It's much easier and faster too, IMO. If I was gonna "cape one out" to have mounted, I would do it the conventional way.Last edited by Kdub; 01-22-2009, 02:23 PM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Kdub View PostI don't even gut deer or hogs. I cut the hind quarters off at the joints and don't have saw the pelvis either. I always hang them by there head also. I used to gut them until I a friend of mine showed me how to clean them this way. It's much easier and faster too, IMO. If I was gonna "cape one out" to have mounted, I would do it the conventional way.
Trying to think back on the last deer I gutted. More than 15 years ago
Comment
-
Originally posted by 3rdShot View PostPlease explain how they work...and what you do with it once you pull it out?
On hogs, I just cut around the low side of the hole and up around the top of the tail, leaving the tail attached as a handle to pull the whole section down through the gap once you break the pelvis bone. Am I doing it wrong?
Comment
-
I had one given to me for b-day or something. I used it on a deer this year and pulled the intestine into...Guess I should have been a little easier with it... I think it will probably work but the chances of me using it again are slim to none... I have one for give away with that beeing said....
Comment
-
How it works- put it in and twist it and until you feel it get tight and then pull out. Does not get urine bag out or puncture it pulls everything else out or frees it up. Then I hang them by their head or back legs and gut them. I have paocher cut some deer as described above but now use all parts of a deer. I get the loins out and also use the flank, brisket, and neck meat. I also save the ribs and put them in a dutch oven around the campfire for a snack.
It does work when they are on the ground and I use it before I hang a deer to start working on it. I also use limb loppers for the front and back legs. Some folks say Im fast but Ive seen faster. I took 2 does from the ground to the icechest in 22 minutes Sunday. Buttout probably saved me 3 or 4 minutes plus the nicks on my fingers from the bone particals from cutting it with the limb loppers.
Comment
Comment