Big Red, You are on to something that the Indians, pioneers, and mountain men all knew. A chopping tool is indispensible in the wilderness. There is a reason why they all carried a light tomahawk as a minimum. Sure, you can use a baton and a heavy bladed knife for chopping, but that is a very poor substitute for even the lightest hatchet or tomahawk. If you do carry a tomahawk or hatchet, you can get by with a much lighter knife such as a Mora or a simple folder. I have numerous tomahawks, hatchets, and axes, but generally take my Cold Steel Trail Hawk on my lightweight excursions in the woods. Can't beat it for cutting poles for shelter, sharpening tent stakes, making a walking stick, cutting a fishing pole, splitting kindling, field dressing a deer (opening the pelvis and splitting the sternum), quartering big game for hauling, etc. Hard to do those tasks quickly and efficiently with a knife. Hawks are for chopping, knives are for finer cutting. A hatchet or a tomahawk with a poll can also be used for pounding, driving stakes, cracking hickory nuts, etc. Marooned in the wilderness and given a choice between a knife and a tomahawk, I would choose the tomahawk as the more versatile tool.