Buy a Skrama, it will do all your camp and pole work; they are back in stock. Get the leather sheath or a British Army Bayonet Frog off the bay for £4. Use a Silky Saw to cut logs. Small Forest Axe if you must, but they are pretty specialised. Good tools don't have to cost a bomb.
You have bought yourself a monster chopper in that knife. Sadly they can't compete with an axe. They are also too unwieldily due to their bulk and make a poor knife.
An axe grind works because it chips out chunks of wood with force. Its got a 2lbs head on a long wooden shaft so wood is going to fly. No knife competes with this.
Fine thin machetes cut things because they are keen and going at high velocity. Too hard a wood and they ring ding and don't cut far. Best for brush or jungle foliage.
Sadly, there is a fashion for big brute thick knife blades. For all the effort and skill making them they really aren't much cop at anything. The big Busse and the ESSE Junglhas for all their popularity just aren't that useful, but they are bought because they are mean and manly! I really have a problem with this style, better off with a proper Billhook. These big blades can't chop like an axe. They are heavy so difficult to control and rubbish for smaller tasks. Heavy to carry far, so relegated to the truck. When sharp at best they are fair but takes real technique to get them to do any real work. In the swing difficult to control and poor at catching the cut on thin springy stuff. Once committed they are hard to stop. If they fail to bite they skid off and as dangerous as any axe. For a whole lot of effort they don't do anything much well. Even as a batton froe its rare to need that kind of thickness. Lastly, they may well be thick steel but if overly hardened, poorly heat treated, are as likely to break as anything else.
Sell it on to those who collect this fashion.
Just in case you think I'm giving you a hard time I do have a choice few high cost knives, but they are bought for their aesthetic appeal and the Custom maker skill. I don't use them much. Different hobby.
Spend your money on a good folder, Benchmade or Spyderco. Some on a nice 4 to 5" sheath knife (a Terava 110 is plenty good, and comes from the same place as the Skrama). A good Silky Saw F180. If you want to blow a wad then Titanium Cooking pots or a Titanium Canteen. Plenty of Gukki kit to spend money on. Best to spend it on the Adventure. Kit used gets a beating and pretty mucky, best to have proper work tools that are efficient at work.
I like the Skrama, but also have a Ben Orford Eban Parang which are very nice too (best for green woods, snedding).