Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Nov 1966, p. 7

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OUTDOORS ~ By Bill Owens Times Outdoor Writer | Nothing demoralizes the lady of the house quicker than the remark that the reason the venison steaks do not taste right is because they were not "cooked right'. This re- mark is often made, and in the majority of cases it is 'unwarranted, for the simple truth may be that the deer carcass was not field dressed right to begin with. Many hunters spend hours in reading and studying treatises on how to bag a deer but just gloss over the most important factor, which results in good table venison. In any event the improper dressing of your deer will result in rancid meat, and this is sometimes enough to kill the ardor of the keenest hunter, So to help in securing better venison we present, herewith a ready reference on how to field dress your prize deer. IN ORDER to do a first rate job, you must have the proper tools. A good quality steel hunting knife, which has been honed to a razor sharp edge before your hunt, is the prime requisite. A medium-sized whetstone is handy to touch up your knife blade during your dressing out pro- cess. A plastic bag to hold the edible innards, a square yard or so of clean rag, towelling or cheesecloth and, of course. a deer, and you are in business, eae If your animal has been head shoi, tien some diEecing of the carcass will be necessary. To do this, place the deer so that the head is-lower than the rear quarters, cut into the slight cavity at the base of the neck, and sever the main blood vessels by a crosswise cut deep into the neck. A deer shot in the chest cavity and close to, or through, the heart will bleed a lot internally and therefore the neck cut should not be needed. OPENING THE body cavity can be done by making a cut through the skin and thin muscles of the upper abdomen just back of the breast bone. Be very careful not to cut the paunch or intestines, for even the smallest cut in these will cause oozing, which will give the meat an unpleasant flavor, Lift the skin around the cut enough to insert two fingers of your free hand into the body cavity. Now, keeping the cutting edge of the 'knife up and between the fingers, slit the skin down to, and around the anal opening. If you lift on the skin as you cut, it will assure you that the stomach and intestines are not cut, In the case of a male deer, make sure that your initial cut is adequate enough to remove the reproductive organs when the intestines come out. When the abdominal cavity is open, cut the membrane which separates the upper and lower body cavity away from the ribs, It is now a simple matter to roll the stomach and intestines out of the animal, SOMETIMES IN the case of a very large deer, you might find it handy to split the breast bone part way to- ward the neck, so that it will be easier to get at the upper chest cavity but in the average size deer this is not necessary. At this point, reach up into the chest cavity and sever the blood vessels, ligaments, the tube from the stomach to the mouth and the windpipe. Draw 'these out with the rest of the innards, being careful not to rupture the gall bladder on the liver. Separate the heart and liver and place in the plastic bag. With the rag or towelling, wipe out the entire inside of the deer, making sure you remove all blood and loose tissues. Scouring with snow instead of using the rags will also suffice, Don't use water to clean out the deer unless the paunch or intestines have been shot up. Cut away all meat which is affected by the pas- sage of the bullet and all the bloodshot meat damaged by it. IF YOU HAVE diligently worked over the carcass in this manner to this point there is all the chance in the world you will have good venison, but any carelessness or delay in field dressing, inadequate bleeding or failure to cool quickly and thoroughly, or blood spreading along the membrane between the muscles, will give you rancid meat. If you must carry or skid your deer to camp, make sure you have taken all safety precautions for the trip. This is sometimes the way hunters get shot by some trigger happy character out to shoot at most anything, AFTER YOU have taken your deer to camp, and the temperature has been fifty degrees or less, you may safely hang your deer head up on a beam or in a tree. Spread - the body opening apart with a couple of sticks, so that the - air can cool and ventilate the inside. If it stays cold, and the meat is kept out of the sun, no spoiling should take place. Keep the carcass hanging for about a week to break down the muscle fibre thus making the meat tender. If the weather is warmer than fifty degrees, transport ~ meat as soon as possible to a locker plant or home reezer. HERE AND THERE -- Dutch Elm Disease has now reached the North Bay area. Experiments are under way in the United States for a curative. Trees are being in- jected with chemicals which are carried by sap to all parts of the tree ... Since 1962, 159 moose have been tagged in the Geraldton District and 26 tags have been recovered ... Hunters who go after moose into remote areas by plane have a success figure as high as 80 per cent ... The first girl ever to enter the forestry profes- sion was Marie Rauter. She joined the Department of Lands and Forests after her graduation last year... A queer deer has been shot in the Rainy River area. A doe with two fawns had a four and a half inch antler on one side of the head, a "knob" on the other, It, was five and a half years old and weighed about 160 pounds .. . An old Indian remedy for wounds was mouldy mashed corn or acorns, actually a crude form of penicillin .. . Canal Lake has been producing some good catches of big pickerel. \A Rapala cast from shore has been a hot bait. OSHAWA BOWLING NEWS -- CATHOLIC LEAGUE High Triples: John A. Cardinal 75) 21); Michelle Brady 70) (279). High Singles: John A. Cardinal 22) $44; Shelia tntusini 251, Michelle Brady) 9, Peter Lamouche 236, John W. Car og 312, Fred Watts 256-242; Dan Ruka-) 276; John intusini 245; Joe O'Malley 244; Barry Leach 259) and Colin. Mo Binnon sos. Points Taken: Seveltites 4) Flintstones @} Ups and Downs 4; The Winners 0; hemps 3; Rebels 1; Apollos 2, and Go- "3 2. The Go-Go's won the first sec- by total pinfal! | INTERCITY Leacue Points taken: Aces 3, Crystals 2, Grits Grings sasha ©, Bank of Montreal 4 653 (244, 241); Jean Kroll 450 (215, 24). Team Standing: Young 3, Nu-Way Rug 1, Macdonald 0, Scugog 0. SHERIFF'S LADIES TAILORING LeaGuE 2 and the Daffy's | 158 irene Kehoe 239, 217, Doreen S$ 244, Marie Pope 233, Ellen Gibson . Bawn Carr jes: Gladys Nesbitt 234, Bar. ameron 24) 24), | 27% Dianne Fisher 211. , 243}; Marion Dingman 654 (218, 267); janet Peel 654 (215, 251); Audrey Byrrili Moderns 4, Strouds 4, Motor City 3, Crawford's Ins. Horwich 1, Hayden High Triple -- Joan Smith 770 (277, » 233) ing 208, Peter Ventress 24, Darrell Nickerson 205, Connie el Pe 218, Dorothy Mcintyre 204 | igh fripies for men: Oon Bright 435. Ledies' Nigh: 615 for Barbara Geen, LADIES' MAJOR "A" LEAGUE High Triples: Lorraine Murphy 60 a 278, 276); Joyce Bell 796 (aM, 218, | 1H ; Sales & Service UNITED RENT-ALL AND MARINE 272); | Separ 663 (209, 203, 251); Al Hill SSS King St. €, Oshawa 728-5565 CSS38$383 3 sass BE WISE . . . ECONOMIZE! SAVE DOLLARS! Premium Quality 16-. Phone 668-334] Mavis Taylor 742 (220, 250, 277 @ (208, 279); Ev Harcing asa (204,! Geneon . Total Points -- A Rew section began with the Sweet Peas taking 3 points, | Carnations 2, Phiox 2, Roses 2, Pansy's High Singies -- Jane MeCrone 293, | u heehey | 231; | 726, Theima Kay Cross 26, | Tammy Hartock 215, Martha Mepstead| By TED SMITS TOKYO (AP)--George Knud- son, the dapper Canadian, stretched his lead on Arnold Palmer to four strokes at the end of the third round of the Canada Cup international golf classic today as the United States took a strangle hold on the team championship, Knudson shot $2-34--66 over the chilly, windy Yomiuri course, giving him an eye-pop- ping 64-68-66--198 for 54 holes, 18 under par. Palmer shot 34-35--69 for 66- 67-69----202 as he saw his one- stroke deficit of Friday widen disastrously. Par for the 6,962- yard hilly course is 72. Still. in individual contention was Hideyo Sugimoto, the big Japanese professional who is playing his. home course. He shot 32-36--68 for 66-69-68--202. Aad gaining ground was Jack Nicklaus of the United States, Palmer's partner, who had his best round yet, 34-33-67, This gave him 69-68-67--204, U.S, HAS 406 The combination of Nicklaus' and Palmer's mighty sub-par golf resulted in a team score of 406 for the United States, 26 under par. Next was Australia, Nationalist China was fourth with 416 and Canada and Ja- pan were tied for fifth with 417. Thirty-six teams from 34 coun- tries. plus Hawaii and Puerto Rico are competing in the clas- sic, which ends Sunday, Knudson's partner, Frank Fowler of Calgary, recovered from Friday's poor round and went only one over par for 39- 34--72 to keep Canada at least in team contention, Fowler's card showed 70-76-73--219. Before the four-day tourna ment. it was predicted freely that the team championship would go at 15 under par. TIES RECORD Charles, the left-hander who is a former British open cham- pion, moved up, despite his 76 ef Friday, by shooting 31-33--64 today, which tied the cup and: vi by Knudson. He would have had 63 and a course record if a six-foot putt on the 18th green. had not stopped two inches short, For Knudson, a Toronto club pro who cheerfully proclaimed himself "the world's worst were two big holes in his six- under-par round. 413, and South Africa, 415. On the par-5,508-yard fourth HAMILTON (CP) -- Coach Ralph Sazio is making sure his Hamilton Tiger - Cats reserve their roaring for Sunday's first game of the Eastern Football Conference final. Sazio scheduled a light one- hour warmup this afternoon and tonight, with all the con- cern of a den mother, he'll tuck his tabbies safely away in a Hamilton-area motel -- just a precaution against possible pre- game~roaring. The idea of keeping his club together on the night of the game when it plays at home was born in 1963, the year Hamilton won its first Grey Cup since 1957. At 10 a.m. Sunday, the de- fending Grey Cup champions will arrive at Civic Stadium-- site of the first of the two-game total-point final against Ottawa Rough Riders. They'll dine on the usual pre- game steaks, prime themselves for the 2 p.m., EST clash and possibly discuss the weather. OUTLOOK NOT BRIGHT And the weather outlook is anything but bright for the game that will be televised na- tionally by the CTV with Tor- onto and Kitchener. blacked out. Snow flurries and rain, that have kept the grounds keepers busy all week, are both forecast for the Hamilton area today and Sunday. A 10-man crew has scraped the mud from the field and re- covered it with a tarpaulin, hoping it will present a drier surface for the game. Rain, which had been pound- ing the field since Tuesday, stopped Thursday night and cool, dry weather moved in briefly. It was raining again by 10 p.m. Friday. Jack Gaudaur, Ticats general Manager, said earlier that the field wouldn't be too bad, "'if the rain will just stay away. The wet weather and soggy 'field will dictate the type of |game for each club, but it will lscarcely hamper the two top point getters on each team. BOTH KICKERS Moe Racine, the EFC scoring champion with 71 points during the season, and Don Sutherin, who wound up in a two-way tie Ticats Go Into Hiding Following Workout Today will hinder passing,cut down on intricate running plays and provide inadequate footing for punters, it will do little to bother the place kickers. Racine ended the regular sea- son with 28 converts, 12 field goals and seven singles. Suth- erin beoted 25 converts, 10 field goals and 12 singles. The second game of the series is scheduled for Montreal next Saturday at 2 p.m, EST, since Ottawa's Lansdowne Park is being renovated, Winner of the ssries plays in the Grey Cup classic Nov. 26 in Vancou- golfer six months ago," there|---- Knudson Pads Lead; U.S. Team Far Ahead his approach shot--a four iron --carried 180 yards and landed eight inches from the cup, He tapped it in for an eagle 3. On the 10th he sank a 60-foot putt for a birdie and from there on he was rolling. *T guess it is because I am standing up straight now," he said, The Canadians played with the South Africans, who are the defending champions in both the team and individual competition, Both Americans were in trou- ble on the par 4 10th and went one over par. Nicklaus' drive hit in a trap, He was on in three and two-putted, Palmer three-putted the 10th for the third straight day. Neither American had great confidence in a team victory Sunday. "Seven strokee can en sw. fully fast with two players," Nicklaus, while Palmer, point- ing to his 35 putts today, said, "We'd like about a 20-stroke lead," One of the surprises of the day was the lapse of slender Lu Liang-huan of Nationalist China, who took a 73 REMEMBER WHEN .. .? By THE CANADIAN PRESS Miss Grillo won the 2% miles event at Maryland's Pimlico racetrack 18 years ago today--in 1948--in rec- ord time of four minutes 14 3-5 seconds for the dis- tance, The six - year - old mare carried 118 pounds to the post. ie WON'T QUIT Andy Hebenton, high-scor- ing right winger with Vic- toria Maple Leafs of West- em Hockey League, wiil play his 1,000th consecutive hockey game tonight in Oakland, Calif., when Leafs play California -- Seals. Hebenton hasn't missed a league game since 1952, in- cluding a nine-year term in the National Hockey League with New York Rangers and Boston Bruins. (CP Wirephoto) HOCKEY TEAM FOLDS MONCTON (CP) -- Moncton Hawks, 1966 Maritime senior hockey champions, have folded, club manager Fred Wry an- nounced Friday. Wry said the decision to disband the team was taken '"'because of a lack of player interest."' RENT-A-CAR DAY -- WEEK -- MONTH 58.00 PER DAY 725-6553 RUTHERFORD'S CAR AND TRUCK RENTALS 725-6553 PLUS LOW MILEAGE CHARGE 14 ALBERT ST, Oshawa |both place kickers. And while slippery conditions for second with 67 points, are HOCKEY EQUIPMENT Try us for service, quality end the lowest prices in town. @ SKATES NEW end USED Used Sketes Sanitized @ HOCKEY STICKS, GLOVES, PANTS, PADS, SWEATERS, ETC. : Complete Line Teams Outfitted Skate Sharpening WHILE.U-WAIT ADULTS 50¢ 35° PUBLIC & HIGH GOALIE EQUIPMENT FOR : RENT SCHOOL STUDENTS .. ICE SKATES FOR RENT STAN'S SHARPENING & RENTAL LTD. --cleans itself as it rofis. SPEAKS SOFT -- Just a w them). rugged service, stops. LIFETIME GUARANTEE DEEP -- Trailmaker's massive tread digs in and pulls in mud end snow BITES HARD -- Hundreds of traction slots put the bite on ice and bare roads. have to roll down the window to heer Acrs TOUGH = Built with tempered NYLON and SUPERSYN rubber for WITH TEETH -- Trailmakers with optional steel safety studs give up to 71% more starting traction -- 30% safer This is the snow tire that bites - - The one with \ y thedeepest « ~ Biting edges of allmajor © TRAILMAKER Siivertown . .. Extra traction when you need it! TRAILMAKER SILVERTOWN Mfrs Our Suggested INSTALLED List PRICE hisper (you'll 6.00-13 7.76-14 8.25-14 7.78-18 8.15-15 26.36 31.30 38.15 31.30 36.15 19.95 24.95 27.95 24.95 27.95 wT TEETH (steel! safety studs) 6.95 extra NO MONEY DOWN -- NO TRADE-IN NEEDED "HOME & AUTO CENTRE 88 K WHITEWALLS 3.00 extra ING ST. W. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, November 12, 1966 7 * » LAUREL, Md. (CP) -- A French horse won the $150,- 000 Washington. Interna- tional Stakes Friday for the second straight time while Can- ada's five-year-old champion, George Royal, finished eighth and appeared lame. The Vancouver-owned George Royal has an ailing right front leg where a bone chip some- times acts up. It did Friday. His owners said George Royal will be retired to stud. Behistoun, a 16-to-l long shot and sixth choice in the field of 10 thoroughbreds, roared down the stretch to win by 2% lengths over the Soviet Union's Aniline, which had set the pace for most of the 14-mile race over a turf course. The United States' Assagai, the 8-to-5 favorite, was third, France Registers International Win George Royal's jockey, Is- mael Valenzuela, said he thought the Canadian champion "got to hurting' with a half mile to go when he was in the fifth spot, George Royal was lagging badly by the time Behistoun made his charging finish. George Royal will be re- turned to Vancouver while his owners work out the details of setting up a stud for the Cana- dian champion, Where he will -- has not been announced yet, Hammond and Hall are ex- pected to negotiate with On- tario and American interests in the hope of setting up a syndi- cate, France, with five victories, is the only invader to win more three of the last five ra with joc! Jean is aboard the last two winners, He. captured the $90,000 first prize . last year aboard Diatome. RUNS FAR BACK omg ae was Leg back in the" early running, and it appeared his long odds were justified.. The three-year-old colt was seve, enth, about six lengths back, when he made a tremendous move and covered the final quarter in a sizzling 23 1-5 sece. onds, The winning prices were... $34.00, $12.20 and $6.60, ' Aniline, in the money for the» second time in three years,, « paid $5.60 and $3.80 after jockey Nikolai Nasibov apparently . tried to steal the race with a.~ slow pace, "cin The winning time was 2:28 > 4-5, compared with the track» record of 2:23 4-5, set by Kelso in 1964. The remaining order of fine: ish was David Jack of England," George Royal, Folio of Brazil'. tne another 1% lengths back. WORLD [3 Heanrwega <-- § 2 CHAMPIONSHIP 3 10:00 P.M. than once. France has won ALI and Socopo of Venezuela. ~ CLEVELAND THE FABULOUS ASTRODOME, pouston, roxas / SSE ron 4s , CABLE TV A CABLE TV EXCLUSIVE! Watch the fight at home on your Cable TV Special Events Channel (Channel 5) -- relayed live from Houston via closed circuit. 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