Opinel cutlery inserts

sidpost

Forager
Dec 15, 2016
248
101
Texas, USA
Picnic+ Cutlery Insert Set

Picnic_InsertSetProducts_2000x.jpg

How do these work in real life? Are they a good utensil for camping and bushcrafty usage? Does the spoon work well for soups and is the fork large enough to be useful for normal meals?

I am thinking of adding them to a Number 9 sized Opinel but, I am open and receptive to other suggestions!

TIA,
Sid
 

Morph

Member
Aug 19, 2009
35
3
Out Back
Yes, they do look interesting. Not sure that they will fit your No. 9 Opinel though; the description does say "Picnic+ inserts are intended to be used ONLY on non-altered Opinel No.08 wood handle knives."
 

Robbi

Banned
Mar 1, 2009
10,253
1,046
northern ireland
Here you go.
Thanks for that but I don't seem to be able to place an order as they say my email address is invalid...... Very strange.
 

Robson Valley

On a new journey
Nov 24, 2014
9,959
2,672
McBride, BC
Get busy and carve your own wooden utensils. Wood carving isn't rocket science. I suggest that you begin with a soft wood such as Linden or most green woods such as the fruit woods.

Metal utensils don't help hot food on a cold night. Then you get slopped up changing from one utensil to the other. OOOPS! Dang, dropped the fork unit in the dirt before I could lick it off.

There are some very good blade smiths in this parish. Or, Mora 162 or 163 will do fine. 164 is too tight a sweep and a chore to make carving sharp and keep it that way.
 

Jared

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Sep 8, 2005
3,577
749
51
Wales
Whitby are the UK Opinel distributors IIRC

 

TLM

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Nov 16, 2019
3,257
1,724
Vantaa, Finland
E="Robbi, post: 2029391, member: 12866"]
?????
[/QUOTE]
Old German military spoon/fork combo was/is sometimes called that because of it's large size. One had to guess if it was meant for digging or eating.
 
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Robbi

Banned
Mar 1, 2009
10,253
1,046
northern ireland
E="Robbi, post: 2029391, member: 12866"]
?????
Old German military spoon/fork combo was/is sometimes called that because of it's large size. One had to guess if it was meant for digging or eating.
[/QUOTE]


Ah, OK... I'll have to have a looksee at that.
 

Tiley

Life Member
Oct 19, 2006
2,364
377
60
Gloucestershire
As I understand it, you can only use the knife or the fork or the spoon at any one time. Hmmmm. I wonder whether it's worth it - at all - when you've got the pleasure of producing your own in the woods along with the pride of using it for years afterwards?

As Tengu said, "It looks like a solution looking for a problem"...
 

sidpost

Forager
Dec 15, 2016
248
101
Texas, USA
If I'm out in the woods for a week or more, carving my own tools makes more sense. The woods around me though don't really have tree species that make a reasonable tool for me to use for food due to texture and density issues.

The Opinel set seems to be a good option for a picnic or a short weekend journey. And, I could see using it at work some when the flimsy plastic cutlery doesn't cut.

Being as short as it is, is attractive to me for throwing it in a coat pocket or even my pants pocket. If I'm at a weekend fair and want something reasonable to eat some random food without good plastic cutlery is another use case for myself.

For preplanned long camping weekends, I generally have some standard-sized Ti utensils and, my desk at work usually has some traditional 'silverware' waiting.

I have spent many a meal wishing I had a reasonable knife and fork or spoon that would not fold, collapse, twist, etc. on me. Something like this should carry a lot like a pocket knife which is a big "win" for me if it is there when plastic cutlery fails!
 

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