Trip Report Celebrating First Blood 40th Anniversary

JonathanD

Ophiological Genius
Sep 3, 2004
12,832
1,549
Stourton,UK
So would your replicas be the one knife tool you'd take if you were going to be dropped off in a remote forest environment. Honest question - just wondering how usable or misplaced you feel it maybe as a actually useful survival / bushcraft tool.


But it IS a great iconic knife.
Definitely not. It’s very much of its time. It’ll do the job for sure if it was pressed and they’re exceptionally well made. The hollow handle weak tang argument doesn’t hold water as Jimmy excecuted it very well. But it’s not for me. I’d put it more in the combat/survival category too.
 
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Bluebs4

Full Member
Aug 12, 2011
884
36
Bristol
I must dig mine out , I had a few of Andys knives next level knife engineering , Iv still got a few hillbill knives ( hope your well mate) I also had the your version the Rob Bayley Deval Johnathan,
 

JonathanD

Ophiological Genius
Sep 3, 2004
12,832
1,549
Stourton,UK
I must dig mine out , I had a few of Andys knives next level knife engineering , Iv still got a few hillbill knives ( hope your well mate) I also had the your version the Rob Bayley Deval Johnathan,
I remember. I saw one of the two I had commissioned come up for sale not so long back for a nuts amount. Although there were only two made.
 

Chris

Life Member
Sep 20, 2022
1,003
1,177
Somerset, Yorkshire, Lincolnshire
So would your replicas be the one knife tool you'd take if you were going to be dropped off in a remote forest environment. Honest question - just wondering how usable or misplaced you feel it maybe as a actually useful survival / bushcraft tool.


But it IS a great iconic knife.


I think I’d go for Topper Harley’s knife from Hot Shots!:

 

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