Knife for coastal foraging ?

  • Come along to the amazing Summer Moot (21st July - 2nd August), a festival of bushcrafting and camping in a beautiful woodland PLEASE CLICK HERE for more information.

Paullyfuzz

Full Member
Sep 28, 2007
1,339
0
Manchester
Can anyone suggest a knife suitable for coastal foraging ? I was thinking of taking my Mora, but thought that the first time i try to prize a limpet off a rock it will probably snap in two !

Not bothered about the rust issue, but it needs to strong and easy to sharpen.

Cheers,

Paul
 
Don't prize them off with a knife give them a kick, works for me. Mora is the only knife i use don't see the point in spending £100 or more on a knife that will only do the same job. plus if you snap or lose it you'll be gutted.
 
Creep up on them (honestly - if they know you are there they will tighten their grip on the rock) and give them a sharp tap sideways with your boot or a lump of wood. Prizing them off with a knife isn't necessary.
 
As others have said you do not need to pry them off, but if this is the method you wish to use try using the bottle opener of a SAK. Mine locks into place for easier use (Trail Master, I think). Or if you decide to change your method use the butt of your mora to tap them off.
 
Maybe i should have worded it differently. It wasnt specifically for limpets, but just general coastal foraging. A knife that is strong and can take the knocks and is cheap to replace..... a Mora it is then !

Paul
 
There is / was a Victorinox Forester on here for trade / sale. Its just like mine (Trail Master)but has a cork screw rather than Phillips screwdriver. Its a good solid knife and should be just what you are after, only thing is that it is a locking folder, if you can live with that, my opinion is to give it a go.
 
The high carbon steel knife himself used, didn't look very good after contact with sea water, there is problerly some way around that like cleaning it after use. Mr xylaria uses a bucktorn stick to get limpets, because myself is blooming useless at foraging anything protein based.
 
Maybe i should have worded it differently. It wasnt specifically for limpets, but just general coastal foraging. A knife that is strong and can take the knocks and is cheap to replace..... a Mora it is then !

Paul

Most of my foraging is coastal (see where I live) I use a standard carbon mora or a stainless depending if I reckon its gonna get covered in seawater. I've vinegared the blade of the carbon one and it doesn't rust so badly now.
 

BCUK Shop

We have a a number of knives, T-Shirts and other items for sale.

SHOP HERE