So many great fixed blades out there it's hard to know where to start or stop:
Dozier, one purchased, one gifted from Bob:
Lovestrand:
Farr:
So many great fixed blades out there it's hard to know where to start or stop:
Dozier, one purchased, one gifted from Bob:
Lovestrand:
Farr:
There's nothing civil about this war.
https://www.randallknives.com/knives/model-25-trapper/
https://www.randallknives.com/knives...d-trail-knife/
There are a lot of adaptations to the knives that you can order. Ordering is a bit of a hassle. There are essentially buyers that buy up most of the production and you have to hunt one of them down, pay catalog price and wait a few months, order from Randall pay catalog price and wait like 4 years, or overpay from somewhere.
https://www.spyderco.com/catalog/det...Bow-River/1800
Old school cool but made by spyderco...
You might like to check out the Scandinavian knives on Ragweed Forge for some ideas. I love Scandis...whether custom or production. Great practical knives available in carbon or stainless steels.
Last edited by blues; 01-22-2020 at 04:53 PM.
There's nothing civil about this war.
Here's some old school. This is a Kabar my dad gave me when I was a Boy Scout in the '60's. Much later as a 1LT it was the only tool available when I used it to dig out a Jeep that got high centered when my boss got it stuck; and blamed me for not spotting the high centering hazard in the 4' grass.
I've gotten great service out of it. There are more traditional versions yet with the leather washers for the grip.
Attachment 47600
“Remember, being healthy is basically just dying as slowly as possible,” Ricky Gervais
^^^^^Kabar. Nice.
"The victor is not victorious if the vanquished does not consider himself so."
― Ennius
Bark River has some nice stuff too.
Thanks much for the direction.
Working diligently to enlarge my group size.
Bark River was my very first thought.
They fit almost any budget. Be sure to budget a sheath though, only some models come with them. DLT and Knives Ship Free have a plethora of options in leather that should fit the bill nicely. Absolutely one of my favorite blade amongst those I own is my Bark River Trakker with a Scout-Style sheath. It's a little big for day-hiking carry, but for back country, it will do everything a hatchet or bigger blade will do and everything a smaller blade will do. It's one of the few "do everything" blades. Plus, it looks fuckin' awesome.
That said, you may also consider a good old fashioned hatchet - Like this Hults Bruk - https://www.dlttrading.com/hults-bruk-tarnaby-hatchet - At 1.25 pounds, it may seem a little heavy, but a hatchet with a flat butt can be used as a hammer for tent stakes, etc. And a sharp hatchet can do pretty much anything a knife can do...except, maybe, skin game. Which you can do, but it's not ideal for the task. That said a sharp hatchet + a good folding pocket knife will do all your camp chores. It may make some cringe, but you can do with a hatchet much easier than a knife...And you have less edge to touch up afterwards when you do it.
Carothers Performance Knives EDC. http://www.carothersknives.com/knives/3-edc2/
This isn't my photo, I, uh, liberated it, but I have two and they're great little knives. The ESEE-4, Swamp Rat HRLM, and several of RMJ Tactical's smaller knives are also great picks. My most carried fixed blade is an RMJ Utsidihi, just on account of how flat it carries, but I heard they're discontinuing it this year.