BTW I'm not anti-axe [see above, I am "investing" in a good axe]. The premise for this thread was, I guess, to provoke discussion. It struck me that there is suddenly quite a big axe culture and I want to understand it and my own rather sudden interest and involvement in it (Ray Mears has a lot to answer for
). Also, I should make clear that I have never used a high-end Swedish axe, nor even a very sharp 'ornary one - of which I am acutely aware (and sharpening rabidly to remedy
).
I like saws too though (especially Scandinavian ones) - I surprised my neighbour, a landowner, by whipping off some quite thick limbs from a beech tree that had been bothering him. He was convinced that it required a chainsaw but my small (18" & 24") bush saws made short work of it (that's how they amputated human limbs in battle in Nelson's day, I've seen the saw they used, had to be fast, no anesthetic). I regret not being able to save my grandfather's old 2 handled crosscut saw that sat rusting in the woodshed during my childhood - probably thrown away years ago
.
Although Ray Mears (and Baden-Powell before him) has clearly been something of a catalyst for all this, I do get the sense that folk are keen that we not loose the old skills and knowledge (we might well need them again). I think in Britain, perhaps we did loose quite a lot of it, but fortunately the Scandinavians (and Germans, Americans, antipodians, eastern europeans, native peoples, etc.) have preserved various things that we can refer back to and learn from. (How is that Ray Mears isn't Chief Scout?)


I like saws too though (especially Scandinavian ones) - I surprised my neighbour, a landowner, by whipping off some quite thick limbs from a beech tree that had been bothering him. He was convinced that it required a chainsaw but my small (18" & 24") bush saws made short work of it (that's how they amputated human limbs in battle in Nelson's day, I've seen the saw they used, had to be fast, no anesthetic). I regret not being able to save my grandfather's old 2 handled crosscut saw that sat rusting in the woodshed during my childhood - probably thrown away years ago

Although Ray Mears (and Baden-Powell before him) has clearly been something of a catalyst for all this, I do get the sense that folk are keen that we not loose the old skills and knowledge (we might well need them again). I think in Britain, perhaps we did loose quite a lot of it, but fortunately the Scandinavians (and Germans, Americans, antipodians, eastern europeans, native peoples, etc.) have preserved various things that we can refer back to and learn from. (How is that Ray Mears isn't Chief Scout?)
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