Curtis Reed Report post Posted June 30 I’m trying something new this fall. Since I likely need more freezer space anyway (3 hunts this fall and I just split a beef) I bought a 10 cu ft chest freezer that I plan on taking to camp and using a generator to keep meat cool until I get home and leaving the coolers at home. Is anyone else doing this and is it effective? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CatfishKev Report post Posted June 30 You could pre chill it at home with some gallon jugs frozen and just use it as a giant cooler then add ice if you need to 3 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
catclaw Report post Posted June 30 I went on an elk hunt back in 2010ish, we camped by Big Lake and stayed about 20 days. We had a big freezer with generator to keep food good. Had 3 hunters, 3 guides and cook in camp. Worked out great. We had a full size commercial kitchen, had range, eating tent, outside awnings, portable corrals. We ran the generator as needed. 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Shane.A.Luke Report post Posted June 30 Very effective. I bought a used chest freezer on CL and took it up on an extended Utah Book Cliffs archery deer hunt. We were able to freeze the heads and ran the generator the whole way back to PHX. We dropped the heads off in Camp Verde and had the taxi freeze dry treat the velvet and they are amazing compared to my other formaldehyde treated velvet racks I have. The freeze keep any ice we had for the whole trip and we only ran it several hours each day until we killed. Good luck this fall. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
dse Report post Posted June 30 If you are going to process in camp then run the generator enough each day to keep the meat frozen it will work great for extended trips. I don't like it to keep meat cool because it's more challenging to keep the meat dry. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Chef Report post Posted June 30 Have been in camps where this was the norm. Especially when hunting Mexico, where we froze hides to try and remove ticks. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Curtis Reed Report post Posted June 30 I plan on just bone in quartering. I have a walk in cooler at home, so Im not looking to freeze it…. When I get home I let it hang and dry age in cooler for 2 weeks. Easier to hang in cooler when it’s kept in quarters 👍🏻 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Hucker Report post Posted June 30 A must! Run it enough to keep meat cold, but not frozen until we can get it hung and processed correctly. We keep our dry goods in it until we need the freezer. CL freezer and Honda suitcase genset. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Phil Carr Report post Posted June 30 These small freezers are less $ than a high end ice chest and in someways better. I bought one from Costco that fit perfectly between the wheel wells and up against the cab of my Tacoma. We used it on a 2 week hunt and only plugged it in when we were using the generator for other uses. We filled it half way with bags of ice and a few blocks. Placed our frozen food on top. Worked great and I use it at home for keeping some spare bags of ice on hand and extra space for food storage. 3 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Curtis Reed Report post Posted July 1 Yeah the freezer brand new was less expensive than a large rotomolded cooler. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
runningbird Report post Posted July 4 I did this years ago on a trip to Alaska. Just a small chest freezer and a small generator. I took my kids there for a trip, and we fished rivers all over. We brought home lots of salmon and Brook trout. worked out perfect. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
wildwoody Report post Posted July 4 Done it many times works great. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Code3 Report post Posted July 13 Been using this method for a long time. Such a relief not to buy & juggle ice if/when you get the game. Then we are able to remain in camp for days after the take. When I’m not actively fermenting home brew, I utilize a temp controller (pic attached) with the chest freezer and a Honda EU2000i. I can set the freezer to any degrees, like 34F, to super chill the quartered meat without freezing it. Allowing me to debone the meat over several hours and not have to contend with deboning frozen meat. At home, this controller converts the chest freezer to an enormous refrigerator for house party food and kegs, so I’ve been told… 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites