Bob Frye | Trib Total Media
Motorists who kill a deer with their vehicle or come upon
the carcass of a whitetail hit by another can keep it as long as
they secure a free permit number. Whether that’s wise comes down
to several factors, experts say.
the carcass of a whitetail hit by another can keep it as long as
they secure a free permit number. Whether that’s wise comes down
to several factors, experts say.
Cue the banjos, right?
Mention the idea of eating roadkill, and
images of backwoods hillbillies, flattened carcasses and buzzing flies
perhaps spring to mind.
But that's not how everyone views
Pennsylvania's roadside bounty, especially when it comes to whitetails.
Whether making the best of a bad situation and collecting a deer they
hit themselves or being opportunistic and gathering one freshly killed
by another motorist, plenty of people each year pick up and eat what
might be called venison a la vehicle.
And now is prime harvest season.
Drivers who hit a deer are allowed to keep
it as long as they call the Pennsylvania Game Commission and get a free
permit number. It handed out 4,117 last year.
Of those, 1,186 — 29 percent —were given out in November. That was more than in any other month.
There are several reasons for that, said Tom
Fazi, information and education supervisor in the commission's
southwest region office.
“It's the rut, mainly,” he said, speaking of
the deer breeding season that has whitetails on the move and crossing
roads more often.
“And it's the colder weather. Deer are still
getting killed in other months. People just aren't keeping them when
they're spoiling so quickly.”
They are keeping them from all over, though.
Commission records reveal roadkill permits were issued for all 10
counties in its southwest region — Allegheny, Armstrong, Beaver,
Cambria, Fayette, Greene, Indiana, Somerset, Washington and Westmoreland
— as well as in Butler and Lawrence.
There's good reason, said Chuck Irion of
Phoenix, Ariz. Owner of a chain of RV resorts, he wrote “Roadkill
Cooking for Campers” years ago after hearing “my tenants tell me stories
about what they ran over and what they stopped and picked up and what
they ate.”
Roadkill can be quite good, he said.
“There's a yuck factor for some,” Irion
admitted. “But if you get it at the right time and get it cleaned up as
soon as you can, it's just a matter of figuring out what parts you want
to eat. Because pretty much all of it is edible.”
That can be true, a couple of food safety
experts said. But would-be roadkill collectors need to consider several
factors, they said.
“In the kitchen or at the restaurant or in
the grocery store or wherever you're at, things come down to time and
temperature. In a way, the same thing could be said for roadkill,” said
Darin Detwiler, an adjunct professor of regulatory affairs of food at
Northeastern University in Boston and senior policy coordinator for the
national nonprofit health organization STOP Foodborne Illness.
Bacteria — from E. coli to salmonella —
start to grow immediately when a deer dies, he said. The warmer the
weather, the faster it multiplies, he added.
So when deciding whether to collect a
roadkill for the table, Detwiler said drivers should try to assess how
long the deer has been dead, how warm it is outside, how clean the
animal is and how quickly it can be put on ice.
“It's not as simple as, ‘Is the meat good or bad?' There are a lot of possibilities there,” Detwiler said.
“You kind of have to use your senses before you get to the point of go (or) no go.”
Jonathan Campbell, a meat extension
specialist in Penn State's department of animal science, said people
should examine road-killed deer for pre-existing wounds, especially ones
giving off yellowish, green or creamy discharges suggesting infection.
Those deer, and ones showing evidence of being fed on by coyotes or
other predators while along the road, should be avoided, he said.
But he wouldn't rule out taking an obviously
fresh roadkill under the right circumstances. Campbell said he's never
eaten roadkill, but would consider it “if I had hit the deer myself and
had the time to immediately field dress the carcass and get the meat
cleaned and chilled as fast as possible.
“In some ways, a freshly killed deer by a
vehicle could be higher quality. You would not have to worry about shot
(or) bullet (or) arrow fragments becoming a physical hazard for the meat
to be consumed,” Campbell said.
“Also, if the deer versus vehicle was an
instantaneous kill, the meat could be more tender when compared to a
mortally wounded animal that survived for hours and ran quite a distance
before finally succumbing to the fatal wound.”
Motorists will encounter a lot of deer in the weeks ahead.
The rut is in full swing, commission
executive director Matt Hough said. There are more people in the woods
bumping into deer now than at any other time of year. Deer are moving in
an attempt to feed heavily before winter. And the end of daylight
savings time has people on the roads at dusk and dawn, when deer are
more active, he said.
All those things often will put deer and drivers in the same place at the same time, Hough said.
The numbers bear that out.
State Farm ranks Pennsylvania fourth
nationally in terms of the likelihood a driver will strike a deer. The
chances here are 1 in 70, compared to 1 in 169 nationally, it said.
For more than a few motorists, the question is not whether they'll hit a whitetail but whether to keep it afterward.
“If you know how to cook it with the right sauces, and you've got a little plan in advance, it can be quite good,” Irion said.
Bob Frye is a staff writer for Trib Total Media. Reach him at bfrye@tribweb.com or via Twitter @bobfryeoutdoors.
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