Harvesting Rabbits.
I know that lots of people get upset that I eat my rabbits.
I really don’t want to offend anyone or make people sad.
Anyone who doesn’t want to learn about harvesting backyard bunnies should definitely stop reading and head over to the gardening section or the cooking side of things. 🙂
We eat meat. I like meat. I don’t want my meat to be raised in sad dirty, cramped places. I don’t want it to be locked in concrete barns, or raised in some other unfortunate situation. I want to eat healthy meat that was raised humanely.
So, I raise animals, care for them, love them, enjoy them & then I eat them. I know there are many others, like me, who want to raise happy food, play with it, love it, and eat it.
Most of us consume animals in one form or another, even if we aren’t eating them (belts, shoes, furniture, makeup, dryer sheets and many other items have animal products in them). It would be tough to avoid completely. I am happy to be pro-animal, pro-meat, and pro-cruelty-free-food.
Rabbit meat is some of the healthiest food you can eat. Not only is it good for you, it can be practically free to raise. Rabbits eat grass, weeds and veggies. This means I can feed my rabbits scraps from my garden, weeds and hay (which we have literally TONS of) and turn it into meat. That’s some cheap food.
This post is about harvesting rabbit meat.
By “harvesting” I mean:
- Killing
- Skinning
- Gutting
- Cleaning
- Chopping
- Freezing
If you don’t want to see bunnies die and get their skin pulled off, you should stop reading….. now. Seriously.
I have some cute food. My kids and I play without our cute food regularly. This doesn’t not make it taste any better or worse, but we get complete enjoyment from raising rabbits. To read all about raising them:
- Why We Got Rabbits
- 5 Things about Raising Rabbits
- Bunny Mating
- Building the Rabbitry
- Keeping Outdoor Rabbits Safe
- Getting the Farm Ready for Winter
Today, we are going to end the Rabbitry Circle of Life. If you don’t want to be dealing with a couple of dozen rabbits during the: frozen water, cold winds, ice, snow, generally miserable season – this is the time to harvest. We are keeping our buck (Hi, Hulk!) and our doe (Hi, Nash!) and maybe one more doe (Hi, Nelson!) over the winter, but everyone else is a goner.
The fewer animals I have to deal with over winter, the happier I am. You will hear me praise the magical mornings in my milk barn with my sweet Jersey cows. This is a different experience entirely. I don’t find my milk-cow related chores tiresome or miserable. Not during winter or any other time, really. I really enjoy my milk cows. Every second of it. Plus, the milk barn is heated. Grin.
Taking care of pigs, rabbits and even taking the dog out to poop are duties I hate in winter. These simple tasks have the ability to bring forth unreasonable amounts of complaining and whining from me on a daily basis. Therefore, the pigs went to freezer camp early in November & the rabbits are joining them. Now I just have a dog to deal with.
The nice part about the rabbit harvest, in addition to making winter chores more bearable, is food.
Rabbit meat is tasty.
# 1 Get Set up
Before we begin the project, we get the stations all set up and ready to go. It is no fun to be running back to the house for knives, ice, buckets and paper towels when you have rabbit blood and fur stuck to you.
We use a waist high table for processing our rabbits (and chickens and ducks). We feel this is much more comfortable than hanging them from trees. Having a workspace will save your back, neck and shoulders. Welcome!
Great things to have handy:
- Rabbits waiting in cages (close by)
- Buckets (or garbage cans) for catching guts, fur, skin, heads & other parts you may not want to eat
- Buckets, large bowls, or coolers with ice to hold fresh meat
- Sharp knives
- Paper towels
- We have a sink in the barn where I can rinse the finished meat or wash up. This is handy but not necessary.
- Zipper top storage bags.
If you have a sink handy where you are processing you can get the rabbit harvest completed from A to Z right there. This is what we do. It’s fabulous. If you don’t have an outdoor sink available, kitchens work fine too. 🙂
Welcome to death row. (Poor, cute food)
I suppose I should add a little disclaimer that I am not an expert. We get the deed done & the meat is great, however, I’m pretty sure that if you asked 10 people how to harvest a rabbit you’d probably get 10 answers….. and they’d all be right. I will add that we have “processed” several animals (chickens, ducks, dove, deer, squirrel, rabbits, pig and we’ve participated in some others as well)…… and rabbits are probably the easiest we have ever done. Not only is it simple to do, it is also the least messy of the animals we’ve processed.
With that being said, here’s how we do it!
#2 “Kill the Wabbit”
First things first…. Before anything else can be done we need the rabbits to be dead. To kill our rabbits we shoot them in the head. If you were going to kill me and my choices were: slit my throat, break my neck or shoot me in the head, I’m gonna pick the bullet in the head every time.
So, this is the route we chose. If you chose another method that works for your homestead – go for it.
DH is taking care of the dirty business today. I have shot many animals in my life, but a bunny is….. well…. they’re cute. And sweet. And I just didn’t want to pull the trigger. I think this is what husbands are for.
#3 Skinning
Once the deed is done the skinning can begin.
We then cut the fur around both back feet so we can get our hands under the skin & begin pulling. Once the first cuts have been made it is quite astonishing how easily the rabbit skin comes off. Just pull it off like you are taking off it’s PJs.
Keep pulling until your rabbit is naked. Once the fur is pulled down to the neck, this is when we remove the head. Many folks remove the head before they start skinning, that is a fine way to go. We feel it’s a cleaner project if the head remains intact until the skin is pulled down. You won’t end up with fur on your meat and it is also less bloody.
A sharp knife will remove the head easily.
#4 Gutting
Now it’s time to get the guts out. This is fairly simple and is the least messy gutting I have ever participated in. Just don’t cut too deep. You don’t want to bust open anything in there. The goal is to simply cut the abdomen open & let the guts slide out intact. When things accidentally get hacked open it’s not pretty.
- Lay the rabbit on it’s back
- Use a sharp knife to cut a shallow slit in the abdomen from the groin area up toward the breast. You will see all the insides instantly.
- All you have to do is raise your rabbit up over something (like a garbage can or bag) and all the insides will slid out. It’s soooooooo easy.
#5 Chopping (or not)
Now we have a rabbit. You have options at this point. You can roast them whole. You can make stock. You can cut them into pieces so they look just like chicken. Whatever blows your skirt up. I am going to cut mine into pieces for frying. Yum.
I’m using a super strong kitchen knife for the job. It can handle meat, bone, cartilage or anything else. Cut your rabbit to order.
I keep a bowl of ice on the table to toss the rabbit parts into as I cut them up. This keeps all the meat nice and cold until I take it into the barn to be washed in the sink & bagged.
#6 Wash, Bag & Freeze
Last, rinse all your meat well, transfer into zipper top freezer bags (or you can wrap in butcher paper) and freeze. You’ll have some of the best, organic, healthy meat you can eat in your freezer.
Rabbit for dinner!
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Candi
Jim
12/08/2016Nice blog. Good article. I enjoy eating meat, yet I love animals. I grew up on a farm playing with our beef cows (when they we calves). I understand and agree with your philosophy…. one suggestion for DH: get a .22 pistol. A nice Ruger pistol will be much easier to wield than the rifle pictured.
Candi
12/09/2016You are soooooo right! A pistol would have been much more convenient for close range. Ha!
Thanks for the comment!
-Candi
Tracy
12/09/2016When we were kids my parents raised rabbits. Every time it was butchering time all our friends would run crying from our yard. There was a point when my Dad’s company went on strike and it seemed like all we ever ate was rabbits and pork chops lol. For the longest time i couldn’t stand the smell of bacon frying because of all the pork we ate during that time.
My husband and I are working our way toward having a little 5 acre spot to call our own. I am so looking forward to having bunbuns. They are so cute and delicious. Num num.
Candi
12/09/2016I think I also could live on rabbits and pork chops – throw in some garden veggies & I’d be set.
So happy for you and your hubs – you can do A LOT with 5 acres…. Really, almost everything I am doing, I am doing on about that much land. We own more property (23 acres) – but it is mostly woods.
Thanks for sharing!
-Candi
the bayou gypsy
12/09/2016Once again, very informative!
Anonymous
08/16/2017I love this site and your blog is great. We have dreamed of doing what you are doing. We moved up state from Florida in December. I figure once we get settled we want to raise rabbits, ducks, and chickens for food. I don’t like how the big corporations handle and process live food. Its inhumane. With having your own farm you know how they are raised and processed.
#Can’t wait for the future
Candi
08/16/2017You are right – when you raise your own food- you know it lived a good life & was treated humanely.. until the end. Butcher day is always a sad day – but also a thankful day. Our animals have a great life & one bad day. LOL
Thanks for reading!
-cj