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Memorial United Methodist Church in Gladstone can help.

By Brad Soroka
Tuesday, November 17, 2009 at 8:26 p.m.

Read more: Local, Outdoors, Consumer, Sports, Venison, Memorial United Methodist Church, Gladstone, Brampton, Soderman's Meat Processing, Salvation Army, Detroit Food Bank

BRAMPTON -- Dennis Harrison is an avid hunter in the Gladstone area.  He hunts deer, but his wife doesn't like venison!

So instead of deer burgers and deer steaks at the Harrison household, Dennis and other hunters who hunt strictly for sport donate their hunted game.

For the 18th year now, the Memorial United Methodist Church in Gladstone is collecting venison to help feed hungry Michigan families.

"We give usually about half of it to the Salvation Army in Escanaba which serves Delta County, and half we take down to Detroit where it goes to the Detroit Food Bank," explained Jackie Roe, Pastor of the church.

Memorial United Methodist has donated five to six tons of ground venison since 1991. 

"I've been a member of that church since 1969...I just love to hunt, and I love to shoot deer, and so I get one every year for probably the last five to ten years," said Dennis Harrison of Rapid River.

The deer doesn't arrive at the church all in one piece.  Instead, it's first taken to a meat processing plant.  Sodermans in Brampton and Viau's in Escanaba work together with the UP Whitetail's Association to process the meat at no charge for the church.

"Later on tonight we'll clean it all up and get it ready for grinding tomorrow.  We'll grind it and package it and put it in the freezer, and then people will come around and pick it up for the donations," said Steve Soderman, who owns the meat processing plant. 

Sodermans says they'll process about 500 pounds of ground deer meat this year for the church, all frozen, packaged, ready to be shipped off to needy families, just in time for the holidays.

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3 Comments on this Story
Comments are the sole responsibility of the person posting them; they are not reflective of the views or opinions of Barrington Broadcasting, TV6, its directors or employees. If you believe a comment violates the Barrington Terms of Use, please report it here.

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Posted by r r, manis - Thursday, November 19, 2009 at 7:47 a.m.

I did'nt say he did - I said I've heard of some doing this! It is great to give but I just can't see giving venison away because it is a big job processing it. And YES; I did donate a good share of food to a local organization!!!

give me a break

Posted by d k, manistique - Wednesday, November 18, 2009 at 10:08 a.m.

In response to rr's comment....

You live in the UP. You have probably been around hunting your entire life in some way or another. No one said in the article that Mr. Harrison was going out in the woods, shooting a deer, and cutting its horns off leaving the body to rot! The article is stating that he, among other hunters, are DONATING their meat to people in need. I think this is something to be very proud of and is very selfless thing of them to be doing. Have you made your food donation to the Salvation Army or Goodwill yet this year, R R??? It always amazes me how TV6 writes up an article about good people trying to make a difference and there has to be someone out there cutting them down. If we didnt have hunting season here in the UP think of how our area would suffer. The hunters from out of the UP that come up here every year bring in a lot of business to local stores, restaurants, gas stations, etc. Try and keep your negative comments to yourself next time.

For the sport...

Posted by r r, manis - Wednesday, November 18, 2009 at 7:40 a.m.

So in other words your only in it for the trophy? I am so against this type of hunting. The purpose is to put food on your table. If you don't like the harvest, then don't do it. I've heard of hunter's going in the woods and finding a whole deer but the rack is gone. How disgusting.

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