I had some time to kill and decided to whip out me icebear water stones.
I ran my Mora over the 800 stone until all the factory machining marks were gone, moved onto the 1200 grit and then onto the 6000 with the nagura stone slurry. I finished off stropping with a little autosol on a (rather narrow) leather rucksack shoulder strap. Now my little green Mora has a mirror shine all over and is scary sharp, as my bare patches on my arm will confirm.
No real reason to this thread other than someone who is still rather green venting some excess pride in a job well done. This is only my 2nd attempt on the stones, the first was on my Gerber Grylls knife. I didn't quite match the factory sharp but it's quite close and not bad for a first attempt. It's not a scandi grind so I wasn't expecting to nail it first time, I little more practise before that one will get scary sharp me thinks.
This waterstone lark is much more satisfying than any fancy modern pull through gadget could ever be.

I ran my Mora over the 800 stone until all the factory machining marks were gone, moved onto the 1200 grit and then onto the 6000 with the nagura stone slurry. I finished off stropping with a little autosol on a (rather narrow) leather rucksack shoulder strap. Now my little green Mora has a mirror shine all over and is scary sharp, as my bare patches on my arm will confirm.
No real reason to this thread other than someone who is still rather green venting some excess pride in a job well done. This is only my 2nd attempt on the stones, the first was on my Gerber Grylls knife. I didn't quite match the factory sharp but it's quite close and not bad for a first attempt. It's not a scandi grind so I wasn't expecting to nail it first time, I little more practise before that one will get scary sharp me thinks.
This waterstone lark is much more satisfying than any fancy modern pull through gadget could ever be.
