Best size axe

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BravingTheOutDoors

New Member
Jan 30, 2025
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London
Was wondering what size and length axe/hatchet people consider best for bush crafting. Especially if I want to carry it in a bag and walk around with it.
I'm thinking 2.25lb with either a 19" or 24" handle.
 
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Hello and welcome to the forum.
What do you think bush crafting is? Put that way it sounds like topiary…definitely not axe work :cool3:
All joking aside about the problems involved in defining “bushcraft”, and the legal aspects of walking around with an axe….
I have three Gransfors Mini, Wildlife hatchet and Small Forest Axe. I also have a larger camp axe with an old head that I hafted myself.

The Wildlife and the SFA will both work for many things that people do in “bushcraft”. I had the SFA first and it was my only axe for nearly a decade. It felled, snedded, split, and hewed. I used it for bow making, spoon carving, making pot hangers and shelter sticks…and processing firewood.

The Wildlife is lighter, easier to use for fine work and crafting but less good and less safe for splitting, shedding and felling related work.

The Mini is cute, but I don’t find it practical for more than feeding a hobo stove and light spoon carving.

Look up those descriptions and you will get sizes and weights.


On the subject of need. I used the SFA on trips to Sweden and Canada, for tree work in an arboretum as a volunteer, and at Moots and meet-ups. I have never found a time or reason to carry it in a pack while out for a walk just because I might want to cut something. Legality aside, it is too big and heavy to haul around just in case in most of the UK.
 
It all depends upon what you want to do with it.

I have found that a fairly small axe head with a 16" handle is a very useful tool and easy to carry. I wouldn't bother with anything smaller.

A 2-2.5lb head with ~20+ inch handle is big enough to fell small trees, to chop and split logs and more delicate work holding close to the head , but is less portable inside a bag.

A heavier, longer axe is better for tree felling and log chopping, but obviously less easy to carry.

A splitting maul is better for doing a lot of log splitting.
 
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Here are some of mine:




 
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It genuinely does depend on what you're gonna use it for.

For me... I found the sweet spot in a 600g head with a handle around 40cm. Can be used 1 handed or 2 handed... I think its this one i have... cant be 100% certain, but basically this anyway.


I've quite literally tested over 100 axes... from tomahawks, to small hatchets to double bit felling axes... And everything in-between. I prefer something like the one in link.

I dont work in forestry, i'm not a lumberjack... So this suits my needs.

Welcome to the Forum.
 
As I posted, earlier, I agree with Hillbill on the usefulness of smaller axes. These get used by our scouts and leaders for a range of tasks.

The nicer (HB) one on the left is 1.25lb (560g), the one in the right is 1.5lb (680g). They both have 16" (40cm) handles.


54635017460_37877091c8_b.jpg
 
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The Scouts used a selection of axes to split hardwood (beech and chestnut) rounds and to make kindling yesterday.



The boy's/forest type axes were a very useful and effective size for splitting, even for the smaller scouts.

A few of them made good use of the 16" 1.25/1.5lb axes for a bit of splitting and producing kindling.

Both of the above types are very portable and applicable to "bushcraft".

We do have some smaller cheapo (Aldi?) hatchets (I didn't procure them), which had terrible cutting edges. I have worked them all to be better profiled and usefully sharp. They are only fit for very light jobs, though.

The splitting mauls and felling axes were too big for them.
 
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