Sunday, 18 August 2013

My First Time Slaughter A Chicken


This is most interesting part of our jungle survival class. Our instructor taught us how to prepare food or animals for surviving in the jungle if we ever get lost...stuff like that = =""" haha.


As you see I'm slaughtering chicken like a beginner holding a chicken like i never hold one before. That's right! This is my first time holding a chicken and the first time slaughtering chicken, I was so excited at the same time eww....

You could feel the warmth and emotions of the chicken head while slitting the chicken throat. ewww..eww.


and then I had to hold the struggling chicken legs upside down to let the chicken neck bleed downward.
Bleed ... please bleed I was tired holding its feet.


Finally a completely dead poultry ... poor chicken bled to death. The chicken pooped during the bleeding process....eww..i had to dip its butt in the river for some cleaning without touching it.


The next thing is we were instructed to make a cut on the skin of the chicken's back just below the wings, and pulled the skin off its back. yay!  a naked chicken.

The reason we skinned the chicken instead of simmering the chicken with hot water to get rid of the feathers is because in a jungle survival situation this is the fastest way to prepare meat by skinning without the hassle of plucking feathers and you do not have hot water if you are lost in the jungle.


After skinning the chicken, the head was chopped off. Bye~bye


Then, make a deep cut at the chicken's back till the bone crack.


Open up the chicken internal organs...make a cut at the topmost to disattach the internal organs.


Finally the organs are pulled off the body without tearing the gallbladder. The jungle survival skills instructor warned us the meat will taste bitter if we teared the gallbladder.


There you are time to cut the chicken and gave it a nice cold bath at the river for some proper cleaning. The nightmare is over for the chicken and me too o(^ ^)o

I'm happy its over and the instructor did a great job guiding us...

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