My EDC is a Benchmade Osborne. In my pack I have 5" fixed blade, caping knife, boning knife, small bone saw and a leatherman. You can never have too many knives lol
I really enjoyed that - thank you! Good advice and I especially loved "be smarter than your tool." No opportunity to bow hunt this side of the water but will certainly check out more of your content. Personally I don't go out the door with fewer than three knives SAK on the belt, traditional in. the pocket and an SAK on the keychain.
Spot on. Our ancestors could do it with a sharp rock. My grandfather used a slip joint pocket knife as often as he used a fixed blade. I watched a guy use his leatherman to take apart and Elk, some Alaskan guides used inexpensive kitchen boning knives on a hunt a few years back... @jonbrown9490 said it best, "The knife is far less important than actually knowing how to use it." I bet Buck would repair that 110 if you sent it back to them. The "spa treatment" is less than $20 and the knife comes back good as new.
I take Havalon, Bark River on my side, fillet knife and Deer Gutting Cleaning Gloves that run up to my elbows and more. I call it my kill kit.
Short answer....one that's sharp and easy to sharpen. The knife is far less important than actually knowing how to use it.
Exactly
My EDC is a Benchmade Osborne. In my pack I have 5" fixed blade, caping knife, boning knife, small bone saw and a leatherman. You can never have too many knives lol
Great video, great knives and love the shirt.
I really enjoyed that - thank you! Good advice and I especially loved "be smarter than your tool." No opportunity to bow hunt this side of the water but will certainly check out more of your content. Personally I don't go out the door with fewer than three knives SAK on the belt, traditional in. the pocket and an SAK on the keychain.
Spot on. Our ancestors could do it with a sharp rock. My grandfather used a slip joint pocket knife as often as he used a fixed blade. I watched a guy use his leatherman to take apart and Elk, some Alaskan guides used inexpensive kitchen boning knives on a hunt a few years back... @jonbrown9490 said it best, "The knife is far less important than actually knowing how to use it."
I bet Buck would repair that 110 if you sent it back to them. The "spa treatment" is less than $20 and the knife comes back good as new.