[Sca-cooks] Wild Rabbits
Deborah Hammons
mistressaldyth at gmail.com
Sat Sep 8 14:09:23 PDT 2012
>From the old hunter lady. Wild rabbits do have a parasite. It dies off
about 2 weeks after the first really hard freeze (that means 36 hours at 24
or below) And do not re emerge until about 2 weeks after the last hard
freeze. Settlers have a story about not eating or killing rabbit unless
the month had an R in it. I haven't been able to find a credible source
for a positive moderately recent plague bunny source, but many with prairie
dogs and squirrels.
Aldyth
Who is just now putting two deer in the freezer. A 9 point white tail and
a 22 inch forkhorn mule deer. In the form of steaks, roasts, stew and
brats.
On Sat, Sep 8, 2012 at 2:54 PM, Terri Morgan <online2much at cox.net> wrote:
> > Tularemia
> > http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/PMH0001859/
>
> I recognise that the disease is common enough to cause a person to think
> twice about eating wild rabbit, but if one was lost in the wilderness and
> able to trap a little fuzzy thumper, would boiling the heck out of the
> cut-up meat eliminate the danger? I was curious about how likely the
> bacteria was to withstand such treatment.
>
> Not that I have any plans to get lost and start laying traps, mind you.
>
>
> Hrothny
>
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