#83503 - 01/22/07 03:37 PM
Ax not a knife?
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Enthusiast
Registered: 07/02/06
Posts: 253
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For background, I'm presuming we EDC a small pocketnife/ multitool/ folder or similar.
But when people add a tool for the outdoors, they tend to add a knife first, often a smaller, lighter blade like a Mora.
But I presume that if I find myself in the wilderness, then shelter and a fire are my priority. In which case wouldn't an ax or saw be my first choice to turn the available wood into shelter poles, firewood etc? My small folder will handle the little tasks, so a knife like a mora would be used for skinning, whittling etc. which are much lower priorities.
So should I rank a saw/ax or similar higher than a knife?
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#83504 - 01/22/07 04:12 PM
Re: Ax not a knife?
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Member
Registered: 11/26/06
Posts: 112
Loc: Pacific North West
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Depends on the type of outdoor adventuring you are doing. For example, I carry both a saw and a hatchet in my Jeep at all times. However, when I do not have the Jeep with me (hiking, backpacking, took a friends car, etc) I prefer to carry a sturdy fixed blade knife on my belt. Personally I find a hatchet and saw too big and bulky to carry comfortably on my person, and they do not fit well in my backpack. Also a sturdy fixed blade knife like a mora is more than capable of cutting the limbs needed to build a shelter.
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#83505 - 01/22/07 04:22 PM
Re: Ax not a knife?
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Geezer
Registered: 09/30/01
Posts: 5695
Loc: Former AFB in CA, recouping fr...
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"...I find a hatchet and saw too big and bulky to carry comfortably on my person, and they do not fit well in my backpack..."
I'm personally stuck in the middle of this issue, I like a fixed blade knive (some, like my ugly old British Mod 4, can do a pretty good job of chopping limbs, etc), I really like a saw over any chopper for limb sized wood, and I love a good hatchet. What to do. Take what is best for you I guess. There are some very small and lightweight hatchets available today, with metal handles and heads the same width as the hande, making them very easy to carry or pack, yet they do a pretty good job of chopping. There are also several brands of folding saws that pack very easily when folded, and of course there are always larger fixed blades available. So whatever turns you on, do it.
How was that for sitting on the fence???
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OBG
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#83507 - 01/22/07 05:00 PM
Re: Ax not a knife?
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Geezer
Registered: 06/02/06
Posts: 5357
Loc: SOCAL
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When someone says "sturdy fixed blade knife" I do not think of a Mora.
My next tool beyond my EDC folder would be a something like a BK&T CU-7. It can chop and be battoned. Or mabe a BRKT Northstar/Fox River. The Northstar was designed with bushcraft in mind, but it doesn't have the flex that Moras have.
After that I'd probably go with a folding saw that would easily fit in my pack.
If my truck is anywhere close by, I'll have the BK-7, folding saw and axe. They're all in the back.
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Better is the Enemy of Good Enough. Okay, what’s your point??
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#83508 - 01/22/07 06:14 PM
Re: Ax not a knife?
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Old Hand
Registered: 09/12/05
Posts: 817
Loc: MA
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Pocket wire saw in my PSK 4" blade folder with me always Heavy duty fixed blade (SealPup or Strider) on a serious hike Hatchet and camp saw in the truck
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It's not that life is so short, it's that you're dead for so long.
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#83509 - 01/22/07 06:31 PM
Re: Ax not a knife?
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Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 02/09/01
Posts: 3824
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Tool kits are properly 'layered' much like outdoor clothing. A PSK and folder are equal to your pocket rainparka, mittens and watch cap. The big knife/axe concept is more goosedown arctic parka. And if anyone has overheated in one of these or actually remained cold from poor layering beneath, you understand the potential outcome with a big knife or axe. A preplanned camp certainly goes up easier with a axe, assuming you are rested, uninjured and have lots of daylight. Your notches are pretty, ends nicely squared and everything looks geometrically perfect just like in the survival manual illustrations. But if your tired, sick or injured and it's dark an axe or even big chopping knife can turn on you. In a resource rich woodland scenario it's just not that difficult to break timber and throw a shelter up in short order. It may look like 'Faulty Towers' but thats not what we're striving for. If you are planning a wilderness trip and are familiar with axecraft by all means include one. If not, the various saws and proper knives niched in between Moras and Guillotines will suffice.
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#83510 - 01/22/07 07:04 PM
Re: Ax not a knife?
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Enthusiast
Registered: 12/18/06
Posts: 367
Loc: American Redoubt
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I carry a Laplander pruning saw by Bahco in my pack.
The pack string of Llamas have a 36" bow saw in their pack. They also carry a Spec Plus SP8 Machetti for light splitting, chopping and splitting elk, deer and bear
A chain saw, ax and shovel are on the ATV back at the trail head.
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Cliff Harrison PonderosaSports.com Horseshoe Bend, ID American Redoubt N43.9668 W116.1888
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#83511 - 01/23/07 12:26 AM
Re: Ax not a knife?
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Old Hand
Registered: 09/12/01
Posts: 960
Loc: Saskatchewan, Canada
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Did you train with Mors Kochanski by any chance? <img src="/images/graemlins/cool.gif" alt="" /> I hear he is a big big fan of Mora blades. (And the axe). Hey check out this site I found yesterday - you can download this amateur's experimentation videos with survival. Being Swedish he is obviously a fan of the Mora as well. http://bushcraft.se/
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#83512 - 01/23/07 04:31 AM
Re: Ax not a knife?
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Addict
Registered: 05/06/04
Posts: 604
Loc: Manhattan
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I was actually just considering posting on this. For the most part I don't really see that the added functionality out weighs the weight of carrying around a big knife. It doesn't chop very well, atleast compared to even a small hatchet or axe. The heavy pry bar type knives don't slice as well as a smaller lighter knife. I just bought a small tomahawk that weighs in at 14oz. Lighter then a lot of big knives, but because almost all of the weight is in the head it chops much better. I don't need to baton light branches and for heavy branches I can use it as a wedge anyway. As I pointed out in another post recently a lot of trees, especially pine which is prevalent here, don't burn with the bark on. So an axe to split logs beats out a saw.
Right now I carry a 3" mora knife as my daily carry and I'll add the tomahawk to that while out hiking or camping.
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A gentleman should always be able to break his fast in the manner of a gentleman where so ever he may find himself.--Good Omens
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