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Post Info TOPIC: ??? For those that eat crows.


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??? For those that eat crows.
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How do you guys clean them? I tried to clean some and ended up having to pick a lot of feathers from the breast fillets. They have very small fine under-feathers that looks like black down. How do you guys keep these off you meat. They are very hard to remove once they attach to breast. The way I did it was to make a lateral cut across the stomach and skinned the breast. Then I filleted the breast meat off each side. Is there a better way to breast out a crow without getting feathers on the meat?

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Greg



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I do this with pheasants, chukars and grouse. Try it on a crow, lay bird on its back and step onto the wings as close to breast as possible then grab the feet and pull. On the birds i mentioned all you'll have to do is clip wings off and you'll have a clean breast with no feathers. Try this when the birds are fresh and or warm not ice cold and stiff and let me know if it works on crows too. I can honestly say I've never tryed to clean a crow to eat and prolly never will.

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watch em fall wrote:

I do this with pheasants, chukars and grouse. Try it on a crow, lay bird on its back and step onto the wings as close to breast as possible then grab the feet and pull. On the birds i mentioned all you'll have to do is clip wings off and you'll have a clean breast with no feathers. Try this when the birds are fresh and or warm not ice cold and stiff and let me know if it works on crows too. I can honestly say I've never tryed to clean a crow to eat and prolly never will.




I guess I am not following you, are you pulling the bird apart when you pull the feet?



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Greg



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I usually eat crow after I have spoken with out much thought.
Tastes kind of bitter and sour.


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I have noticed from when I was MUCH younger I have had to eat crow when faced with a JUDGE ,,, without proper counsel.

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8     

Yes it actually does pull the bird apart, the head and neck and back,guts etc. come off with the feet and the breast and wings stay intact. As I said I've never tried it on a crow, but it works on every bird I tried it on. You can PM me if you want and I'll explain furthur.

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watch em fall wrote:

I do this with pheasants, chukars and grouse. Try it on a crow, lay bird on its back and step onto the wings as close to breast as possible then grab the feet and pull. On the birds i mentioned all you'll have to do is clip wings off and you'll have a clean breast with no feathers. Try this when the birds are fresh and or warm not ice cold and stiff and let me know if it works on crows too. I can honestly say I've never tryed to clean a crow to eat and prolly never will.



Yeah, this works on crows, I have used this method. Like you said, it doesn't work well when the bird has cooled down, but works good when it's still warm.

Kev
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Kev

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