I always wanted a ventile poncho but could never justify wasting the cash on one... Seems I was lucky I didn'tVentile poncho
o.k., thanksLaplander blades are considered a consumable/disposable. Reason being that its far cheaper and easier to replace, than resharpen. THey have 2 layers of teeth sharpened on both the inside and the outside of each layer.
£15 for a replacement blade... Easily that if not more for the correct file to resarpen it with... then you need to skill/ability to resharpen such a blade... Then you need the time to do it.. So just to re-sharpen your laplander for the first time, you could probably buy 10 new saws, never mind just the blades. Then, theres the fact that a laplander has harder steel teeth, welded to a softer blade/body... how many times can you resharpen it before needing to buy a new blade anyway?
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Silkys do cut better and cleaner, but aren't as robust. Horses for courses. Wilderness/bushcraft... laplander for me... Pruning stuff at home... Silky. Can't buy a new silky blade when on a trip. but you can straighten a laplander.o.k., thanksno advantage over my silkys then!
But you can plan ahead and have spare blade with you. One is none, two is one.Can't buy a new silky blade when on a trip. but you can straighten a laplander.
Still use a lot of my clones of those (upholstery or clothing leather) - but not for coffeeAnyone mentioned the reindeer leather coffee pouch yet?
I'm a recent convert to one of these. Lovely, tactile, unbreakable and smells gorgeous.Anyone mentioned the reindeer leather coffee pouch yet?
Refering to my post #67 here above; having spareparts for your essential/important equipment that you can´t field repair is not a fad.
Fire piston was the first item I thought of when I saw the thread.Fire pistons.... I tried, I really did, but I never got them to work. All I got was frustration and blisters.
The Exotac (predictive text insists that that ought to read exotic!) firesteels worked but, why bother ? a wee scrape down one worked fine.
Without wishing to hijack a very interesting, entertaining and occasionally embarrassing thread, has anyone compared the Laplander with the Silky Outback? The latter seems more hardy, less horticultural...The Bahco vs Silky debate rages on...
Other options are available, they just haven't been marketed as "bushcraft".
Without wishing to hijack a very interesting, entertaining and occasionally embarrassing thread, has anyone compared the Laplander with the Silky Outback? The latter seems more hardy, less horticultural...
So it’s not the folding saw that is the “fad”, it’s the brand name that is fashionable.
I have my father-in-law’s folding saw. It’s probably 30 years old and came from a Cheshire garden centre. I’m not aware of the brand. It’s back home, I’ll look in an hour or so.
It may well not cut quite as quickly as the named brands that I read about here but it’s plenty good enough and I’ve got time. Out in the woods I don’t cut firewood but if I did: I’ve got even more time.
In thirty years it has been abused, twisted and bent back into shape many times. The blade isn’t replaceable even if I wanted to. I’d rather be using it than any new tool.
Perhaps if I were a professional arboriculturalist or owned an orchard where I used it more than just a couple of hours at a time I’d buy something else.
This thread lists a number of items, not just saws, that many of us find useful and which have stood the test of time.
Brand names come and go.