I like the way the thread has turned.
Modern day people have grown accustomed to a knife being a weapon, gone are the days of old when you took your shotgun down to the post office to get or renew your gun licence.
People have become watered down, and have no association with the old ways, something I think that bush-craft is strongly associated with so here we have the past clashing with the present and the future.
In times gone by, everyone would have carried a knife of some type as things did not come in a cellophane wrapper, food was eaten straight from the field and the general public were more dexterous than many that have been bred over the last 30 years.
This is evident by the total lack of gun and knife crime in rural areas, were these "implements" are in common everyday use.
The bulk of the populous has been forced into the city, were they have their first experience with guns and knives, but unfortunately its at the hands of a street thug or criminal, not the local gamekeeper.
I ran a shooting club in the skittle alley of a local pub for some 20 years and it was rather funny when folk came in from the city and saw rifles stacked around the walls of the pub on a Wednesday night, not all of them covered
They loved it actually, and were also fascinated by the brace of pheasant hung on the hat stand. It brought about much conversation, and still the police turned up, handing me kids that had been caught playing up with air rifles in the local cities and towns.
They brought them to us for retraining, all of which became good safe shots in the end.
The cops would walk straight past the rifles hung by their straps on the coat hangers. It was the norm, and totally socially acceptable
They were happy with what we were doing, the landlord loved it and so did the townies, we were a rustic blast from the past
Sadly the laws don't really allow fully for the rustic, let alone the rustic eccentric , so here we are trapped in the middle in a world of ambiguity.

ATB