Just as an FYI, I am relatively new leader in a Scout troop. The Scoutmaster of our troop told me that last year a Scout at summer camp brought along a folding hand saw - the kind where the blade folds into the handle much like a pocketknife. He says that while one of the Scouts was using the saw the blade snapped during the push stoke. That wouldn't have been so bad, but the portion of the blade still in the wood jabbed into the side of the Scouts hands creating a nasty gash that required stitches.
Now, I suppose that could happen with any kind of saw, but a folding saw puts the hand so close to the blade area that it makes me lean toward a bow-type saw even more.
I currently have a Sven folding saw and have used it for years with good results. The only problem with it is that the angle of the handle always felt odd and the triangular shape limits the thickness of wood that it can cut.
Lately I've been looking at the 18" or 24" Trailblazer aluminum buck saw - and leaning toward the 24" version. It looks like a nice saw that stows very compactly, is durable, and can cut large wood. Here are links to two reviews:
http://outdoors-magazine.com/s_article.php?id_article=43http://www.physics.mun.ca/~sstamp/knives/trailblazer.html For a hatchet, I've seen the Granfors Bruks axes and they are nice - they ship so sharp that some of the ones I saw at the store had actually sliced through the leather sheaths as people had taken the sheaths on and off - that is sharp!! It makes me wonder if anyone makes a kydex sheath for them.
During my Scout leader training they recommended I buy a Estwing 16" plastic gripped Camper's Axe. The idea is that the metal handle takes a lot of abuse from young Scouts - much more than a wooden handle. I ended up buying a leather-handled Estwing Sportsman's Axe because I couldn't find the other one locally. I've been warned to keep the handle dry so it doesn't absorb water once the varnish coating wears off. Of course I'd keep it dry anyway since it is carbon steel.
The Estwing axe is not nearly as sharp as the Granfors Bruks axes and doesn't take an edge as well, but my goal has never been to put a shaving sharp edge on an axe anyway. If I was buying an axe limited to my own personal use I'd probably buy one of the larger Granfors Bruks axes and would hope I can find a kydex sheath for it.
Ken K.