I reckon this is a great choice. It has a bigger curve than most hawkbills. Locking isn’t a problem if your intention is to use the knife for what it’s designed to do, it’s too easy to close a hooked blade on your fingers while reaching in.Hi all, I'm looking to get a sickle-like knife for gathering / foraging herbs.
A friend mentioned the Opinel 10 pruning knife (pic below) as one possibility, and I'm aware the locking mechanism can be removed. What do you use and recommend, please? Thank you.
I live in the UK and I've been reading elsewhere on the forum about the relevant knife laws (non-locking, blade length, reasonable to have etc).
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Nogent? The Champagne knife making company?A few years ago I picked up this gardener's knife. It's a very simple thing with no spring; a mechanism that in French might be called a "piedmontais" or in English a "two-nail" or "penny knife".
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Not a company; Nogent is a town, historically one of the main manufacturing centres in France for all things choppy and slicy, along with Thiers, La Monnerie-le-Montel, Saint-Rémy-sur-Durolle, Laguiole, Nontron, and a couple of others whose names escape me for the moment.Nogent? The Champagne knife making company?

Was asking mainly because i spent a bit of time at Fort De Nogent in Paris.Not a company; Nogent is a town, historically one of the main manufacturing centres in France for all things choppy and slicy, along with Thiers, La Monnerie-le-Montel, Saint-Rémy-sur-Durolle, Laguiole, Nontron, and a couple of others whose names escape me for the moment.