Warning- some hunting pics behind spoiler tabs, below.
A review of the Ray Mears designed Spyderco Wolfspyder
This knife had a lot of appeal:
1. I like Spyderco's compression lock
2. I have an irrational fondness for Scandi grinds
3. I like knives that date to be "different" (up to a point)
On un-boxing, the knife seemed a little smaller than I'd envisaged, but immediately likeable.
In hand
Not a “zero” scandi grind- there was a secondary edge micro-bevel
I put a (crude) “true” scandi edge on it and whittled a couple of try-sticks/trap triggers:
Carves beautifully with the zero edge but it may not hold up, being a stern test of micro-chipping in relatively high carbide steels:
Roughing out a serving spoon type thing:
Feather stick
A rather wonky spatula/spoon with hanger
Bit of a hot spot where the curved part of handle sits:
Beware: dead animal/hunting pics behind link below:
Continued...
A review of the Ray Mears designed Spyderco Wolfspyder
This knife had a lot of appeal:
1. I like Spyderco's compression lock
2. I have an irrational fondness for Scandi grinds
3. I like knives that date to be "different" (up to a point)
On un-boxing, the knife seemed a little smaller than I'd envisaged, but immediately likeable.
In hand
Not a “zero” scandi grind- there was a secondary edge micro-bevel
I put a (crude) “true” scandi edge on it and whittled a couple of try-sticks/trap triggers:
Carves beautifully with the zero edge but it may not hold up, being a stern test of micro-chipping in relatively high carbide steels:
Roughing out a serving spoon type thing:
Feather stick
A rather wonky spatula/spoon with hanger
Bit of a hot spot where the curved part of handle sits:
Beware: dead animal/hunting pics behind link below:
Continued...