Cutlery!
We’ve done a fair bit of talking about guns in these Friday sessions. While we all love fine guns (well, most of us do) and the activities in which fine guns are used, there is always a need for fine cutlery as well. If you hunt, then knives are important for a variety of things, especially after you’ve fired the final shot; that’s when the fun ends and the work begins and a good knife with a good edge will make that work go a lot more smoothly.
But there are many more uses for a good knife, whether your outdoor activities include hunting, fishing, camping, hiking or just lounging around in the outdoors. So, let’s talk about a variety of cutlery for a variety of purposes. Qualifier: This is about knives for hunting, fishing, camping and general outdoor choring; I won’t discuss fighting knives, throwing knives or any other such special-use stuff. At least not in this article.
Sheathe Knives
Two words: Full tang.
My Grandpa had a great example of a handmade knife some years back. A local guy who Grandpa had done some carpentry work for during the Depression had no cash but was handy with steel. He had a bar of razor steel and offered to make Grandpa a knife out of that. Grandpa agreed, and the result was a wonder, a full tang (meaning the steel of the blade extends fully into the full profile of the handle, with grip panels on either side) knife with walnut grips. That knife would take an edge like… well, a razor, and would hold it. I remember watching Grandpa hone it, wipe it on his old razor strop, then proceed to slice paper by dropping it on the blade. Sadly, when Grandpa died that knife disappeared along with all his fishing gear and his old Fox double.
About the time Grandpa left us, my folks gave me a Western sheath knife, the old W36 Bowie type blade. That knife not only takes a good edge but (as I know from experience) will hold it through two deer or a cow elk, including not only field-dressing but skinning and quartering. A good solid full-tang sheathe knife like that will do you through almost any outdoor choring you’re liable to run across.
If you’re dealing with either small game or fish, there’s one sheath knife that really stands out; it’s flexible, holds an edge well, it’s lightweight, and it’s not even very expensive; that would be the fine old Rapala fillet knife. Its fine, tapered blade is delicate enough to take thin fillets off small fish and to deal handily with rabbits, squirrels and birds. With the 6” version you can easily field-dress a deer, so long as you have a hatchet or saw to cut sternum and pelvis. But the Rapala isn’t really a big game knife; it’s with small game and fish that the Rapala shines.
Some things to look for in a fixed blade sheath knife: A full tang, a stout blade (it shouldn’t be thin or whippy, unless it’s a fillet knife, when a thin blade is needed) and a good hilt to keep your hand from sliding up onto the edge.
Folding Knives
Two words: Buck 110.
There are many folding hunters by many manufacturers (Schrade in particular makes a very good one that is a doppelganger of the Buck 110) but the Buck 110 Folding Hunter is the gold standard by which all such folding hunting knives are measured. It has a fine stainless blade that will take and hold a good edge while literally (as Buck commercials used to show) being tough enough to survive being hammered through a nail. I have one that I have carried since I was about sixteen; I’ve dressed deer, antelope and javelina with it, along with all manner of smaller critters. It rode my belt through my Army service and saw duty there for everything from opening MRE packs to (closed) rapping on the crew doors of armored vehicles to get someone’s attention.
Buck, Schrade, Case and a number of other manufacturers make good solid folding hunters. I suppose there may be some off-brand blades that are of acceptable quality, but I have yet to see one. I have a small 3” folding knife that carries the Winchester name and according to the blade was made in China (what the hell isn’t?) and it’s of pretty good quality. I was given that knife as a gift back when Winchester was still Winchester; I can’t speak for the quality of any such knives now, if indeed such a thing is still available.
Some things to look for in a folding knife: A solid riveted hinge, a secure lock, and good brass or steel on each end of the knife. A quick-opening feature can be handy but isn’t essential, but a good lock is – you don’t want the knife folding up on you when you’re elbow-deep in elk guts.
Pocketknives
Two words: Swiss Army.
Sometimes I think there are many variations on the Victorinox Swiss Army Knife as there are stars in the sky. You can get a cheap little inch-and a half version with a tiny blade, a file and a toothpick, you can get a massive version with screwdrivers, a corkscrew and a magnifying glass, and everything in between. One thing you can count on; if it says Victorinox on the knife, it will be a good buy.
When I was a kid the Barlow was something of a standard among the farm kids, hicks, rednecks and roustabouts I grew up with. They were good for whittling, cleaning fish and small game, or any of the other thousand and one tasks for which we needed a cutting instrument. Those knives are now made by Schrade and are still a good handy pocket knife.
Some things to look for in a pocket knife: Light weight, portability, a good stainless blade (440 is the best) and a handle big enough to make for a good safe grip. Multiple blades are handy but not essential.
Oddballs and misfits
I can’t summarize this in two words.
Those of us old enough to remember the old Herter’s catalog (the real Herter’s, not the purveyors of junk that have somehow acquired the name now) will remember that old George Leonard Herter had some very distinct ideas about outdoor equipment, and knives were no exception. I have one of what old George called the Herter’s Bowie knife, which isn’t at all like Jim Bowie’s classic design but instead looks more like a steak knife. But looks aside, the old Herter’s sheath knife has a stout, thick stainless-steel blade of good quality steel that holds an edge well; its lack of a guard makes some caution in handling necessary but it’s a good solid outdoor knife. Mine has been used to dress out few eastern whitetails back when I lived in Iowa, and always performed well.
The Wyoming Knife is another oddball, this one a specialty device meant for one purpose: Field-dressing and caping big game animals. It’s a funny-looking thing. While I’ve never used one, I have used knives with a back-hook meant for field dressing, and it’s handy to be able to quickly and smoothly unzip a deer, elk or antelope. It makes for a nice clean process, or at least as clean as field-dressing can be. Now that I think on it, I may have to try a Wyoming knife next season.
And don’t overlook such multifunction tools as the famous Leatherman. Plenty of military folks carried one when I was in back in the Cold War Army, Mrs. Animal among them. While it’s not really a “knife,” they do have knife blades along with all the other various and sundry tools found in the device. It’s a handy thing to have around and while I don’t carry one on my person as a rule, one does live in the tool box in my truck.
And so…
And, finally, some unsolicited advice. For those who frequent gun shows or any other kind of outdoors trade venue, or even if you look in the glass cases in many gas stations and truck stops, you’ll see a wide variety of knives for sale at some incredibly low prices. Believe me when I tell you, they aren’t worth even the few dollars they charge for them. They might make decent paperweights, but as practical cutting instruments they aren’t much good.
Most of them are made from Chinese, Pakistani or Indian steel that is unevenly tempered and full of cinders. If you can manage to get one to take an edge, it won’t hold. Don’t bother. Pay some more, get a good quality knife from a reputable maker, and you’ll never regret it.
There’s an exception: If you know a knife is going to be abused, don’t spend a lot of money. My Dad kept several cheap pocketknives in a drawer, rarely having paid more than a couple of bucks for them. He used them for scraping paint, for prying, for digging, whatever his choring around the place required, and when one broke – they inevitably did – he would toss it in the creek, go in the house and grab another. While there’s an exception for every rule, that’s the only one I can think of in this case.
A knife is (or should be) a serious tool for serious business. You don’t have to go broke buying one, but neither should you cut corners. Pick carefully and you’ll have a good solid piece of cutlery that should last a lifetime.
Great article, thanks!
So what exactly kind of knife is a poon tang?
Don’t forget about the Wu Tang.
Or Orange Tang.
AKA Astronaut Tang
Or Tang-led up in Blue.
Tang https://youtu.be/Wn6FT3EW-EA
It’s got a lighter handle than an Orange Tang.
Most of them are made from Chinese, Pakistani or Indian steel that is unevenly tempered and full of cinders. If you can manage to get one to take an edge, it won’t hold.
Heh. I found out the hard way. When I was an undergrad, I bought a cheap made in Pakistan Bowie knife. It would not hold an edge. It disappeared during one of my moves and I don’t miss it.
I carry a Leatherman Wave and a folder with a larger blade. Pretty much covers everything I need a knife for.
^This^
Since a multitool got my ass out of a bind decades ago I haven’t carried anything else. Multitools are a wonder. I have a bucket of all kinds of utility knives rusting away somewhere. Outside of something to carry out and about I have kitchen knives that I use in the kitchen: a boner, a chef’s and a filet. Don’t touch my kitchen knives!
Amend: I do carry a machete. When I was younger and in better shape I would wear out 2 or three machetes a year. Now it takes me three years to wear one out.
A machete should be as long as possible (keep your knuckles away from the blackberry thorns), good tool steel and 3/4 of the blade sharp enough to shave hair on your arm.
Ditto on the kitchen knives! I’ve got a drawer full of kitchen knives but there are just a couple that I use regularly. They’re razor sharp and hands off.
You mean you dont toss it into a steel sink and then after it is washed shove it point first into the flatware pocket on the drying rack full of steel flatware? Use it to cut pizza on a pizza stone? Drop it and let it clatter across a ceramic tile floor?
*ears begin to emit smoke*
Agreed, Suthen. Nobody but me gets close to the Wusthof cutlery. While I’m thinking on it – got any recommendations on good stones or sharpeners?
Ya’ll will laugh at me, but I just sharpened up a knife with the bottom of a ceramic coffee mug (the slight raised edge is rough, otherwise this won’t work). Admittedly I bought the knife for less than $10 and the coffee mug was a freebie, but it really worked, the knife hasn’t been this sharp since I bought it, no problems on tomatoes anymore.
Now… would I use that one Wusthof, maybe not… but it is cheap and easy.
I have been using coffee cups like that for decades. It’s a trick my grandmother showed me.
I’ve got a sharpening system but I typically just dress the edge on occasion with a ceramic rod.
Thanks, Spud.
See Lackadaisical below for carbide steel. I use a diamond block from harbor freight on stainless knives that I bought for five bucks. Not much else works on stainless. The four sides are #200, #300, #400 and #600 grit.
if you want to get crazy on carbide you can use a cloth wheel with jewelers paste to polish the edge.
In either case you can just wave the knife’s shadow over a tomato and it will fall into slices.
You mean you dont toss it into a steel sink and then after it is washed shove it point first into the flatware pocket on the drying rack full of steel flatware? Use it to cut pizza on a pizza stone? Drop it and let it clatter across a ceramic tile floor?
I see you’ve met my wife.
Actually, that’s unfair. She truly listened when I explained to her how horrible all of that was for the knives and now she uses the smaller knives in the block for that abuse, saving the santoku and chef’s knife for me.
Great article. I play around with knife making. Just finished cutting up some Koa wood that I poached in Hawaii for knife handles!
One thing I didnt see in the article was blade shape. There are lots of different shapes available and different shapes excel for different tasks but for an all around using knife you cannot beat a drop-point.
Here it is. Oops, nope. That’s a flashlight. This? Pulse-ox. Third time’s a charm. Reading glasses!?! Finally. Sure enough “110”.
Repeatedly reached into the top compartment of my SAR pack to pull out my buck knife. I bought it more than thirty five years ago for my motorcycle trips and didn’t remember the model number. Self-organization pushes the least frequently used tools to the back and in fact, I haven’t yet used my buck knife on a mission, but I’m really glad it’s there.
Great article, animal. Thanks!
I once owned a whittling knife. That was sweet.
As a fellow cutlery enthusiast, those are some beautiful knives.
I have one of these in my pocket. I’ve had it since about 1995.
I owned and quite liked my Gerber multitool, a gift from my older brother, until a shithead “friend” from high school availed himself of it and that was the last I saw of either.
I have, in my kitchen a knife which was my grandmother’s. She called it a “boning knife” and the blade (made thinner and thinner by decades of use and sharpening) looks almost exactly like the blade of that rapala knife.
Same, and I have some butcher knives that after about 30 years of being uncared for I took a whet stone to, now razor sharp.
Good article animal.
I have several sheath knives that have been with me for decades. The genuine WWII era Ka-bar and a VTN era Camillus that have done good work for me outdoors. The Ka-bar earned its retirement since it is a collectors item now but the Camillus still gets use. I received a gift of a three knife set from the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation that is packed away so I can’t check on the manufacture. It has a fixed 6 inch blade, a smaller 3 inch blade and a skinning/caping blade. They have done well but are no way close to my love for my……
I have been using the same folding Buck Hunter since I was in grade school and it has skinned countless animals from western cottontails to moose. That knife is in my will to be given to a friend that hunts. I carried throughout my army career. I found a “6 Blasting Cap” holder as a 2LT in 1982 that had stout military grade velcro. That holster fit the Hunter perfectly. Over 100 jumps, multiple combat tours and thousands of days and nights in the field and I still have the carrier for the knife. This is THE knife in my life.
Dead on for the Rappala. I use the one my great granddad gave my father.
A great cheap knife is an Opinel. Inexpensive and the one I got in the 1970’s takes an edge quickly and keeps it decently. (Can’t swear to current quality. I got one for my son a decade ago and he had no complaints until he lost it.) It is very light so that was the knife that stayed in my climbing pack since lightweight is critical on a cliff and I didn’t want to risk losing my Buck Folding Hunter. The one time I had to cut a rope under tension, it went through it like butter.
One year I went hunting after the house was packed up for a move. The only knife I had access to was an AK bayonet. I put an “edge” on it but I do not recommend it for working even a small NC whitetail. I damn near threw it in a creek it was so bad at holding any type of edge.
Advice needed: Suppose I were an Arab (stop laughing!), hailing from, ooooohhh, Saudi. Now there’s some large native game coming from there that I might have to field dress after the fun part. The working area is a bit confining. What would be your recommended tools?
The cordless Sawzall with the M18 batteries.
Splitting the carcass along the spine is easily done with a chain saw.
Isn’t that a noise hazard in confined spaces? I mean, OSHA would be all over that.
Use some pita laying around for earplugs.
Is this hunt happening in Turkey with imported Saudi livestock?
Bone saw and a vat of acid?
Camel?
For years I dressed hogs and deer using scalpels. I had a ton of them that I bought for my bio labs. For splitting down the spine I used a crosscut saw – hand powered. Tacit may have a good point about the sawzall.
Uhhh, yeah, that’s it. A camel. Yep, sure.
Gonna need a bigger vat of acid.
Thanks Animal, great article. I shot my deer with the 336 a couple weeks ago, dug through 3-4 layers of orange clothes to find the Buck 110 and went to a work on dressing out a critter. Following day dressed out another for a friend who has a heart problem. I’ve got the Schrade too but always take the Buck. I’ve had the Buck for 40 years, maybe, the Schrade for 30. I have a couple filet knives but fall back on the Rapala, fileted a lot of small crappies/sunfish over the years.
I have the smallest Leatherman in my tackle box, tie it onto my bibs for Canadian fishing, the scissors will cut Spiderwire and the other super lines. The only thing I don’t do is keep my knives sharp enough. I seem to be incompetent and never have learned how to get them properly sharpened. I would happily pay someone to sharpen them correctly.
If someone asks you what you want for Christmas…….
https://www.amazon.com/Ruixin-Knife-Sharpener-Kitchen-grindstone/dp/B01N2T5RR3/ref=sr_1_5/140-2973945-0929921?ie=UTF8&qid=1543005840&sr=8-5&keywords=ruixin+pro+knife+sharpener
I think that is a winner. I’ve got a ton of Amazon points, I’m guessing it’ll be free or close to free. I’ll get for Mrs Fourscore, she’s always complaining about the kitchen ware but of course I’ll have to use it. Great idea, thanks, Suthen.
I just ordered the recommended knife sharpener, had enough Amazon points to get it free. Thanks, Suthen. Hope I don’t put my eye out.
I’ve read enough Suthenboy posts to buy this in less than a minute, without thinking twice. Yay! Thank you!
I use a similar setup. Much more pricey but more versatile.
https://www.edgeproinc.com/apex-model-edge-pro-system/apex-4-kit-apex-model-edge-pro-sharpening-system-p7.html
A history lesson on Napster Vs Metallica. I was one of the people that got a letter from Metallica threatening to sue me. I had a bootleg of ‘King Nothing’ where they fucked up the intro and had to start over. Metallica had said bootlegs were ok, then they threatened to sue me. I wish I still had that letter.
Many blades in many different steels. But for me in suburbia I get the most use out of my Spyderco Manbug. The VG 10 steel is the best balance for me of hardness versus cost versus ease of sharpening.
I have other Spyderco and other makes in more premium steels, but I think the VG 10 just fine.
https://www.spyderco.com/catalog/details/MBK/Spyderco-Manbug-Lightweight/708
I carry a SOG powerassist multitool. It has a nice standard and another serrated blade, a vcutter, and the best foldable pliers I found on a multitool.
https://www.sogknives.com/type/multi-tools/powerassist.html
I have one of those in the black finish. I take it work every day.
Uh oh. Santa might have to buy herself something early…
It does have blasting cap crimpers built in.
Now there’s some large native game coming from there that I might have to field dress after the fun part. The working area is a bit confining. What would be your recommended tools?
Just use a woodchipper.
I forgot my usual sailing knife. I keep a folding Sheffield with a bright red handle clipped to my pocket. I like that is has some edging near the base of the blade to cut line mantel and ridging on the top to aid in closing in cold weather while wearing full fingered sailing gloves.
The surprising beer of the day was Bourbon Barrel-Aged Choco-Marsh Café BORIS, which was unfortunately tap only and not bottled. I’ve got several bottles of BORIS batch #300, and some Frogichlaus for Christmas gifts.
I just downed a pint of Powerhouse Porter at Sockeye Brewery with lunch.
Does the Choco-Marsh have sugar in it?
There was a good deal of residual sugars in it… This link should work. I blame the fact that the lowest ABV beer there was 7%.
Frogichlaus?
I don’t know.
Samichlaus for me.
Fred brews some really good beers, and collaborates with several European breweries as well. His beers are pricey, and he doesn’t do anything sessionable, but most of what they release is awesome.
Darnit! I was just near the package store most apt to get the Goose Island, but I forgot to stop by. ISATG.
I can’t believe no one brought a knife to pun fight.
I won’t skewer that remark, but…
But what? Just get to the point.
Cleave it already
Cutting edge commentary, for sure. It’s not over until we’re in to the hilt, though.
Making me feel the nostalgia a day after Thanksgiving. Shame on you, Animal. I loved watching my Dad using his knife to fillet a walleye. If you’ve ever had a small fish bone caught in your throat, you know exactly how awful that feeling is.
Nice article, I’m always interested in seeing or hearing about interesting knives. My dad always kept a Rapala in his tackle box.
I’ve got a bunch of knives but the two I carry regularly are a Cold Steel Recon One and a Kershaw Clash. It’s funny, they’re a good way to show people the difference in steel quality. The Clash is a handy knife. Assisted open and half-serrated blade, which are both useful features in a pocket knife. The blade is Chinese steel, but a comparatively high quality. It’ll get decently sharp and hold an edge for a little while under light use. The Recon One, however, uses an American steel. It was more expensive, but it’s easily the sharpest knife I’ve ever owned and will hold a razor edge for a long, long time under hard use. I sharped the Clash maybe once every couple months to keep it usable. I sharpen the Recon One maybe once a year to keep it shaving-sharp.
This article reminded me that I need to get a knife.
So I did.
Nice!