Coolbot

wy-tex

Veteran member
May 2, 2016
1,064
347
SE Wyoming
Last fall we installed a Coolbot unit into a walkin cooler that had gone caput. This product works great. It will turn a window air conditioner into a cooler. We installed the unit and promptly put 3 cow elk and 2 mule deer in it. It kept the cooler at 39 degrees until we took all home to finish aging. It is a great product and way cheaper than a walkin cooler compressor.View attachment 16535
 

wa-hunter

Active Member
Apr 24, 2014
235
7
thanks for posting have been looking into buying one for a cooler build we are going to attempt.
 

Colorado Cowboy

Super Moderator
Jun 8, 2011
8,365
4,757
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Dolores, Colorado
I notice from your pictures that the hides are on all the animals. I have hunted most of my life I warmer climates and we always skinned the animal as soon as possible after we killed it. I continue to do this even tho I live in Colorado now where it is a lot colder in hunting season. I heard the pros & cons about allowing the meat to cool with the hide on and want to know your take. I don't want to hijack your post so you can PM me if you want to.
 

Tim McCoy

Veteran member
Dec 15, 2014
1,855
4
Oregon
I've hung meat, quarters (elk and moose) and whole (deer and antelope), with the hide on, when it is cold out. When it will freeze at night or be close. One big WT I shot in SD at dark, just gutted, cold as heck, left it draped over a log. It famously froze solid, had to hack saw legs off to fit in PU with canopy, -15 in early Dec will do that, still hear about that one.

The hide can help keep it clean transportating it out in some cases, others just flat ran out of time and was cold. We sometimes skin them when we get them out or maybe the day after. One Moose was gutted, cut all the way to the jaw bone skinned a bit down the neck, pelvis fully split, hide slit and skinned a bit on each ham, and front quarters partially opened, layed on it's back with a couple sticks under it overnight. He was shot about an hour before full dark. Quartered and transported the next morning, skinned and in meat locker by mid-day, meat was perfect. Was Sept in WY at about 8,500', low to mid thirties with some wind that night. My sons Moose two years ago, was skinned and hung in a locker within 3 hours. No difference in meat quality.

Another was an antelope in MT, first time I did not skin fully, late Oct/early Nov, lows in mid 20's, highs maybe 42-44. Shot and just gutted. My buddie, a MT native, said leave it in the truck, I was suspicious, pitched a bit of a fit, then figured he's been doing this for 50 years and that was my first Antelope, so shut up. 3 days later delivered to processor, skinned at that time, the meat was excellent.

Couple keys I learned from the first MT experience, the carcass was fully chilled due to weather conditions, skin flaps trimmed away so it is not tainting meat. If not super cold or cold and deer or smaller, I do partially open them up. While I prefer to get it fully skinned and swinging in the breeze, and we usually do that, if weather is right, I simply have not found it to be an issue if done properly. Probably done skin on 10x or so in last 25 years.

My experience anyway.
 

wy-tex

Veteran member
May 2, 2016
1,064
347
SE Wyoming
These were hung with hide on until they were hung at home. Then we skin them out for aging. Here cold is our friend and rarely is it so hot we have to worry about spoilage. We nearly always leave the hide on until it is hung at our home. If it is warm out we skin out asap.
We also take great care while field dressing.
Leaving the hide on reduces the amount of drying out the meat does, the rind formed is not as thick. This helps preserve more yield from animals like antelope and deer. We have been processing our own meat forever and never had an issue. We also live in a very dry climate. A humid climate probably would not work as well with the hide on.We do however skin all of the hogs we take in Texas before hanging. Mainly due to the fact that are always very dirty, muddy, and full of ticks and mites. Dirty hides get pulled off of everything right away. A big bull elk will get skinned just so his meat will age better. I do believe leaving the hide on can affect the aging process on thick skinned animals.
 

wy-tex

Veteran member
May 2, 2016
1,064
347
SE Wyoming
The folks at Coolbot are great to work with. They can give you any info you need. This is a very small walkin, about 4x10. We have friends with a much larger one that uses a bigger a/c unit and they also love theirs. This set up costs us about $600 for the a/c and coolbot.
 

Colorado Cowboy

Super Moderator
Jun 8, 2011
8,365
4,757
83
Dolores, Colorado
The only reason I asked is because a friend of mine built a cold room similar to yours and would leave elk and/or deer in it (just above freezing) with the hide on for 2 to 3 weeks, He said that this allows the meat to "cure" and become more tender. I ate some of his deer and it was really strong flavored. I realize there are a lot of other things that can cause this, but like I said, way different than what I do. The buck I killed last season was skinned within 1 hour of being killed. Temps really cold, snow on the ground and got down to around 10 at night. I trim off any bloody meat/edges and then put each quarter in a muslin bag and in the truck bed covered with a tarp.