Hi Ted, Ed
Cool, glad you liked the pictures, a picture is often woth a thousand words. The choice is vast, and it is difficult to tell this knife is better than this one. A knife is a very personal thing. Personally I like them when they have a reasonable price (some of the blades I showed here were paid 9 Euros!). I prefer wood and leather to plastic, but again this is very personal. The Scandinavian edge is very good for carving, (read that as a more classical term for bush craft) because it is designed as such.
What is sure is that I can hardly justify any blade bigger than 12 cm, either in usage, or because it would just frighten too many people, police included! I often carry a fixed blade, but rarely attached to my belt, more often in a pocket or pack. So too bad for the US bowies and the like (I own some, never uses them!).
Most of these knives you will not find in France, the only pieces I got in france are the Massano, Mauri poylio, Plazen and F1. The rest came through exchanges, or was bought to net vendors.
One address I recommend is
http://www.tool-shop.com or
http://www.toolshop.de, these guys are great, the prices are transport in EU included, generally arrives 4-5 days after order.
I did the F1 myself. cut the handle with a cutter (it is all it takes! -- there was a bit of rust under...), then I used sculptor gouges to cut the place for the tang into tho slabs of cocobolo, epoxied them together, and then shaped the handle: here are some more pictures:
and hese is my A1, whose blade got convexed, and handle changed. This knife came for factory totally unusable. It would not cut (saucisson (dried saussage) because the edge wat too thick and obtuse. It stayed like that a few years until I picked up the grinder...
now on a slightly different but complementary subject,
For jungle work, and bush cleaning / small tree work, what I would recommend is a Survival Golok from australian based Valiant Company. (
http://www.valiantco.com)
It is something like this (bottom one):
it is from indonesian origine, All horn and ironwood sheath, for 50$ ! + some 15 transport. Blades are differentially tempered, and we have used them here in France on all sorts of woods, but also in Canada, beleive us or not you can cut 3 to 4" saplings without feeling a thing, and they keep the distance up. I'd carry a golok or a Parang anytime instead of a hatchet, it is the same weight, but much more versatile. Funny enough, these guys also do Damascus blades (called Pamor, it is a dama stacked vertically insteat of horizontally, and they do work very well too.
another smalleer Golok (10")
Don't be mistaken, these are very high quality blades, they would outcut a US army machete or a martingdale anytime, and some, like a parang lading can also get a tree down. The main common point though is high ergonomics, you hardly ever get tired!.
For the fun, here is a bowie from valiant, the wooden sheath is home made. (9"blade)
and here is a HUGE parang (the bowie is 9" bladed)
Anyway, as you can see I do have some really big stuff, and I do think 4" is the practical maximum to carry on myself.
Next on my list is either the Gransfors Bruck Small Forest Axe, or the Roselli long axe (they are actually the same size)
here is a japanese saw, big model, and a SFA and a Roselli.
The roselli may seem to have a strange shape, but it shows an amazing cutting power, better than the SFA in hard wood, just slightly under in softer wood. It is an extremely thick bevel and is excellent for planning and shaping wood, where the SFA, which is a linbing axe is not good at all. The roselli is simply the most versatile axe I have met so far. (but a GB is 45 euro, a Roselli is some 80)
And of course, the good old Opinels are the rolls royce of the cheap disposable knife, and I am always amazed to see what a # 12 can do.
Hey don't be frightened, I think that now you have seen all blades I like.
Last thing, I have a Safety article there, please read it, and stay out of trouble:
http://outdoors.free.fr/s_article.php?id_article=11
All the best from Nice, and have a good week,
Jean-Marc