Thank you, Shaun - now I know I've been doing it right! I'm serious - I first started cutting my own for two reasons: 1. The meat was always gamey due to bone being sawn through for steaks, etc., and 2. After bringing a 197# dressed weight 8-point buck to the "butcher" (just a guy with a bandsaw, a garage and 3 sons) and holding the paper shopping bag worth of meat from my deer, I asked where the rest of it was. I was told that what I had was what there was, and that I was "ignorant" of how much waste there was in butchering. Yeah, like into his OWN freezer kind of waste. Anyhow, it's a pain for me because of time poverty these days, but my oh my what a wonderful way, to butcher your own. Anyhow, like I said, it's nice to know that I figured out by accident what you've shown is the way to do it. I always had those nagging doubts, especially when people would ask what cut of meat were they eating. Beyond the tenderloins and loins, what did I know? What I called the "round" is actually the sirloin... oh well, good learning times at hand.
Oh yeah, and Max (the family mutt) REALLY likes that I butcher our own! He gets all the scraps, and he especially likes the front quarters after they've had the meat boned off them. Of course I'm sure he'd prefer that I'd leave the meat on them, but that's not how it's gonna be! I'm glad he's not too visible from the road, it looks like a dinosaur kill around his house when we're done.