May i ask how would i go about doing that?
Well, you would start just like you would sharpen it. Lay the bevels on a flat grinding surface and sharpen away the striations. I like to use sandpaper mounted on a block of wood, usually backed with hard rubber, which helps the sandpaper to dig in. Any flat sharpening stone will work. Go from coarse to fine, until the bevel is smooth and has a mirror finish. To get a microbevel, you can raise the blade slightly on a very fine stone or sandpaper like Mors Kochanski does. That will help peel off the wire edge as well. Personally I use sandpaper mounted on a block of wood with a mousepad glued between the sandpaper and block. I will typically use 1500 and 2000 grit paper and polish the whole bevel, but the give in the mousepad will create a nice convex microbevel at the edge and peel off the wire edge.
In all cases, finish by stropping on leather charged with a polishing compound. I also use leather mounted on a mousepad for this. Keep the bevel flat and let the mousepad set the microbevel. Too much pressure, though, will round the edge.
The knife in the pic came brilliantly sharp but the edge crumbled the first time I put it to a hardwood dowel. I resharpened it and now it's a wood eater.
If you plan on doing a lot of batonning, I'd make the microbevel thicker until you find what works for you.
As a final touch for a stubborn wire edge, I sometimes will hit the edge LIGHTLY with an unsewn buffing wheel charged with a polishing compound. Mine is mounted in a drill.