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05-13-2022, 03:19 PM | #13 | ||||||
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We eat snowshoe hares often, Gotta cook them a long time,or in a pressure cooker, as the legs are like superballs
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to John Dallas For Your Post: |
05-13-2022, 07:25 PM | #14 | ||||||
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I hunted a number of years back in Stuttgart Arkansas and Gillette and saw signs for the famous "Coon Supper" I asked about it and the guides and owner said, "Yup, it's a real thing but it ain't that good...and those Clintons used to come to it and Hillary would make believe she ate it and she never really took a bite to swallow...." Don't know if that's true, but it wouldn't surprise me from her : )
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05-13-2022, 08:53 PM | #15 | ||||||
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Now coon, that's a different story. They actually make a very tasty stew. I came across a hardly damaged and still warm roadkill coon late one night while riding with a friend in her Corvair in about 1967. I took it home and practiced my taxidermy skills on it - remember the Northwestern School of Taxidermy ads in the comic books? I stuffed that coon up real nice and had it on the end of our dinner table watching us as we chowed down on the stew that my grandmother made of it - I swear that woman could make you like a stew made from gravel! It was very tasty, not at all gamey, and at some point my sister noted that it was good and asked what was in the stew - bad idea. I told her it was from the coon down at the other end of the table. She choked and jumped up and ran outside and threw up and was clearly done with coon stew - forever. An unforgettable true story that I still laugh like hell at and love telling after all these years.
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05-14-2022, 10:30 AM | #16 | |||||||
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The Following User Says Thank You to Mike Koneski For Your Post: |
05-14-2022, 10:46 AM | #17 | |||||||
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They do not eat as well as cottontails and need more cooking. We made a stew from them. |
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The Following User Says Thank You to Daniel Carter For Your Post: |
05-14-2022, 12:26 PM | #18 | ||||||
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Dan, the hare season in PA is three days and they are very localized.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Mike Koneski For Your Post: |
05-14-2022, 12:45 PM | #19 | ||||||
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Thanks Mike, my memory said a week at that time(70's) so i looked it up. Limit of 1 a day. Guess it would be a trophy to a PA. beagler. Ran in to a few PA. beaglers in Maine who had made the trip to run them. They do not hole and will take the dogs out of hearing causing some anxious moments when you begin to wonder if they are running off game.
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05-14-2022, 12:52 PM | #20 | ||||||
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Craig - How can woodchuck be any different than muskrat?
I gotta get me a muskrat soon and cook it up like i would a snowshoe hare... and let me tell you, snowshoe hare is not tough at all. I quarter them and take the quarters and the section that has the backstraps and tenderloins and cook them on the grill basting them with something mild (so as not to destroy the flavor - they taste like the dark meat on a store-bought turkey) and eat it like you would a drumstick - Delicious!! Every year at deer camp I try to get a hare or two with my .270 - just look for their black eyeball against the white fur and the snow on the ground - put the crosshairs on that eyeball and BAM! No loss of meat at all. .
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