One if by land, one if by sea!
1. We first skinned him down the back peeling the hide towards the belly to have a work area. Then sliced down the outside of the legs and peeled them. We were not interested in te hide. The legs on that one side were removed and carried to the boat. Then the back strap. We then rolled him over and repeated the process until all 4 legs were off. Then we removed the head and neck. Then the side ribs cutting along the back bone and the belly until free. Rolled him and repeated the ribs. "Still have not broken the guts." The only thing remaining was the pelvic section which was detached from the guts and placed in the boat. Head lastly. All this, and the guts are still in the same place as where the moose landed.
2. Was in the water. We tried baiscally the same process but had one hell of a time. This was a bigger moose. He is my Avitar at times with me holding my .44 that I shot him with. We were cutting under water, feeling for the joints and such. It was not pleasent but it went basically the same way.
Advise. Have some extra rope along to hold the legs up and to help position the body. If at all possible, a come-a-long or a pulley system that will hold 1,000 pounds. 2-3 (1 w/gut hook) really sharp knifes and a diamond hone to touch then up, a bone saw, plastic gloves, garbage bags or game bags, someone to help you, and plan your time accordingly. We ended comming across the Yukon at 1 a.m. in the morning!
Have students comming shortly so if you have any other questions, please ask.