Could you guys help me finding a lab in the lower mainland to test black bear for trich?
Could you guys help me finding a lab in the lower mainland to test black bear for trich?
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Check the "Wild Game Recipies" section... there's a recent thread in there.
I'm not sure what the point of testing is though. Trich is very common in bears. I don't think the test is 100% accurate and there is a variety of other parasites that could be present. It's not like if the test for trich is negative that it's safe to eat undercooked bear meat.
Cook until the internal temperature is 165. At that point, trich worms/cysts become bonus protien!!! Don't worry whether or not it has trich... it probably does!! Enjoy and congrats on the bear
It would be cheaper to buy a microscope and freeze and slice off a super thin layer and light it up and look at it. Some times a sugar cube size chunk has as many as 300 calcium cysts in it. The cysts contain the egg or worm.
Why the test? Just cook it to 165 degrees and it is good to eat.
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I called around last year and no, provincial government does not test it any more.
We took the meat to commercial freezer, where it was for over 7 months at -25C. We still cook the meet anyway.
Better safe then sorry.
Just cook it and don't look back, too many guys are over-thinking things. There was a time when commercial pork had a higher risk of tric and people still ate it. I've taken bears in the morning and eaten the tenderloins that day for dinner, no issue!
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Fully agree. A large percentage of ground beef has e-coli and chicken has salmonella. I wouldn't pay to get my ground beef tested when all I need to do to avoid getting sick is to cook it and maybe wash my hands ;-P
No point for anyone to go and pay for testing stuff or getting too excited about trich at all. It's is just one of dozens of things that a bear is likely to carry. Tape worms are extremely common as well. You can usually find tapeworm segments in bear scat. I'd be suspicious of a bear that wasn't hosting a variety of critters.
I plan on shooting mine tomorrow, he'll be in my belly as soon as he's in sausage/pepperoni form I think if I was worried enough to consider testing a bear I probably wouldn't shoot a bear to begin with.