The irony is that these simple, "primitive" knives will see years of use and be worked into the ground whereas so many ultra modern titanium, magnacut flippers will spend their lives as safe queens.
Sad fact bro, I have a Microtech Spartan and Eric Oches small batch with ti and sv steel. They were both a tip from a client I worked for... Those beautiful blades sit on a display shelf and a 1940s case barlow sits in my pocket with a 70s Shrade Sharpfinger sits on my hip. Interesting what sees use and what is set aside and honored.
@TheWatcher60401 even my winchesters are not safe queens. I'm using my greatgrandpaps 1894 3240. Rifle this year in deer season. I inherited when I was 8 years old. It was made in 1898. I finally found how to reload for it. The rifle is amazing accurate. If I miss a deer it's on me.😊
Made right here in my hometown! I worked there for awhile in secondary. We had a pegboard in my department with reference patterns for probably 200 different knives and tools that they made over the years. The 2212 is still a very popular pattern, I had thousands of those blades pass through my hands while I was there.
20 years ago, i found an old green river knife, in a leather sheath, in a river bed in the southwestern Utah desert. i used it for survival classes for years. still have it
Those of us in our 70s and 80s can appreciate that a lot of these very knives ended up in our great grandmas kitchen. I sorta inherited one or two of these myself.
Thank you for a great video. These knives actually work, unlike a lot of the modern stuff. Here in Europe, knives like that are still made in Sheffield and Solingen.
It was your channel that first exposed me to Green River Knives a few years back. Otherwise, I'd never heard of them. It is to my understanding that a lot of these earlier knives were without handles and shipped out from the manufacturers a such. It was then up the merchants or buyers to put on the handles for the knives. I appreciate your research and historical insight. Along with that, your channel is one of the very few that actually does real-world, out in the field testing to include game processing when it comes to knife reviews. This really sets you apart from the rest. Keep up the great work, bro!
I bought my Green River hunter as a knife blade only at a rendezvous over 30 years ago. I made the handle scales out of a cherry tree limb, and the sheath out of some old Latigo leather from the 1970s. I love this knife.
Ive got my great grandpa's old hickory green river knives. About 8 or 10 of them. Dexter Russels these days are the knives that you let the 18 year old prep guy use in the kitchen. Ive cooked and been a meat cutter for 30 years and the industry standard is the forschner victorinox brand of knives.
Thank you James for showing a great knife review, I own several of these old knives, plain old carbon steel, easy to use an sharpen, the new stainless knives have their place, but are hard to sharpen, the carbon steel knives just sharpen on a smooth stone out of the river, easy to maintain an use.
Way back when you asked subscribers to give you ideas on knives that we would like you to show on your channel here James , I was the one who recommended the green rivers to you because you liked classic knives and you used them to clean and cook game or fish you caught and thats what I do with mine. They are pretty close to a all around knife be it cleaning game or bushcraft camp chores ect they do it all and at a very modest price point.
Hey Mark I totally agree ; I've had my "Green River" for close to 50yrs now. I received it as a kit for Christmas when I was a young kid, where it became one of the first acquisitions in what would become a life time of knife collecting. In all these years I've never seen an advertisement, and this is the first time I've ever seen them mentioned on you tube, and I've been following follow the bushcraft community for a very long time. I think it's long past time "to give them there due". Thanks for the great content.
I love when I find one of their knives at a yard sale. It makes my day. I've made micarta and wood handles for mine I have also reshaped a couple to make a belt knife. Fantastic blades...
I've carried a Green River 2022, over 30 years. It looks like a vegetable or paring knife. I made a neck knife sheath for it, and used it for big game, birds, and fish, every chore. Thanks for the video.
Great shoutout. I have to concur I have never seen any other youtubers cover this brand. They do deserve more love. The tip style on the hunter (along with the smake eater which followed suit) is pretty much the only tip I like just as much as a traditional drop point since it behaves the same but has a nice twist on the formula.
Oh come on James, 0000 steel wool cleans them all! Edit: Dexter has ambassadors for their fishing line, and bbq line, maybe you could request being an ambassador to the hunter/heritage line.
It's a shame to erase the character off of a good carbon steel knife! The patina & not rust shows it is used unlike so many drawer queens out there. I hate seeing naive or ignorant people actually use their knives for a change & then whine when there may be a speck of surface rust, patina, or a ding on the scales. I love coming across an old knife somewhere & wondering the story behind it when I see a dark grey blade, often worn due to years of sharpening and a well used handle.
I found an old green river hunter blade blank rusted to hell in the bottom of an old boat. Cleaned off the rust-left the pock marks-and added a catalog handle. One of my favorites
Wow!! Thankyou . The first ever info I have seen on a truly great knife . I too used Maple for a handle on mine ,however I used Birdseye Maple . Can't say enough good about the Green River that Mountain Men used to pay 25 cents for and then complained about the price increase . 1095 gets as sharp as a razor and Old Hickory can't even stand in it's shadow . If that 1095 gets any moisture on it don't turn your back on it though as it will rust quickly . Thankyou again, as this 77 year old dude really appreciates your knowledge .
Yahoo for green river knives! This type of knife, well made for a, good price, used on this continent for centuries simply works. A well used knife with a patina speaks to my heart. Stay out of the cholla!
This is a great video, thanks. This Green River hunter is a design I'm thinking of making. The blade shape lends itself to woodworking as well as slicing, so having a full height convex grind, half height saber convex, and scandi grind would all be applicable with it. Legendary shape.
I’ve been using Green River trade knives for over 50 years. They used to have thicker blades with jimping on the spine close to the handle for thumb placement.I still have one of those and it’s a much better knife than the Old Hickory knives.I have a couple of the more recent Green Rivers that are thinner blades that are great knives as well.The Old Hickory knives are really good knives, but they just don’t compare to the Green River knives in my opinion and experience with them.
Hey James, excellent video. I was kinda missing seeing you out and about with your Green River Hunter. But I get it, you had a great opportunity to make your own custom designed knife, the Snake Eater, and I really love the design elements from Green River that you put into it. The Dadley I sent to you has orange osage handles, but they do look like olive wood. Anyway, I absolutely enjoyed this video. Thanks my friend.
i love the blades youve sent us, they are my go to in the kitchen, i just made a pork stew with them last night. we appreciate all your love and support james. new cuervo negro video coming soon
Thank you for introducing me to another knife I need to get now. I’ve always have seen them in catalogs but they never really appealed to me until this video. Keep up the good work.
Awesome video, James! I have a couple of Green Rivers because you introduced me to them. Dexter Cutlery should make you an ambassador and cut you a check 💰💰💰
I could not agree with you more. I have a green river shinner. I bought as a blade. I put my own oak handles on the knife. The blade sharpens so well and keeps an edge very well. I carry hunting and camping. God bless awsome video. 😊
The knife with the green scales is the Green River SHEATH knife. Robert Duvall used one while filming "Lonesome Dove". I have one with a paracord handle and another in 10 GA. copper scales.
Green River knives are old school perfection. I have scaled many for family and friends they all say they keep a super edge, are easy to maintain and develop a nice patina with use. Scaled a skinner for my brother years ago and his wife took it and is still in her kitchen to this day.
I got into Green River knives in the late 1980s. It's all I've ever used. I use the file work on the Dadley for scraping my ferro rod. The Dadley is my EDC.
After waffling back and forth for several years, I finally broke down and bought a Green River knife a couple weeks ago. After reading reviews about the knife, many commenting on how crudely finished the handles on the current models are finished, I decided to give one a try, hard to pass up such a legendary knife for $25. The scales, as expected, are finished pretty roughly and have lots of loose fibers, especially in the cut grooves, but a bit of light sandpapering and work with an xacto blade has cleaned it up some. I'll leave the rest to wear away over time with use. Otherwise, it's a very nice useable knife. I look forward to testing it out in the outdoors.
THANK YOU for this review! My grandfather was a cook and I inherited quite a few old hickory from him. I am aware of green river, but have no direct experiences………. Will DEFINITELY be changing that after such a wonderful video!
Thanks. I’m a real knife nerd and have never heard of Green River. I love the old timer knives and am a restorer of vintage Western and Scandinavian knives. I will have to pick up one of the Green River blanks to customize. 🔪🎸
@@robertfandel9442 That's what mine are. Bought mine through Cold Steel's Special Projects, back in the 90s. Been buying and using Cold Steel since the late 80s, including 12 years US Army. Tough dang knives. Bought 3 more a week ago. Lol
Love my old Dexter, R. G. Wood, Wilson, Goodell carbon steel knives. Years ago I found a terribly rusted, deep pitted large butcher blade. I cleaned up only slightly and gave it a sharpening. Wow! The sharpest blade I've ever experienced. I do like your Snake Eater design but would only want it if it was 1095 and possibly a little thicker.
I must admit, that I have a few Old Hickory knives, but I'm yet to own a Green River. I do believe that it's time to rectify that ,. Great video James!
I like the simplicity of the high carbon steels. I like cleaning my baldes and then sticking them into a potaoe for a couple of days, wipe down, oil and use. I have made a couple of Green River kits and have a few other blanks to complete. They are thin and therefore they are great cutters.
I purchased two green river blanks ,15 or so years ago. I put a cocobolo handle on the hunter ,and buckeye wood scales on the buffalo half skinner ,two awesome knives
Ordered mine and sanded down the scales to fit my hand better then l forced a nice dark patina on the blade with warm white vinegar to help prevent rusting and then coated the blade with warm olive oil. Great little knives! Mine came very sharp but I cleaned mine up with my warthog sharpener and stropped it on my leather belt and it absolutely shaves!! For a $15 buck knife you can’t beat them!
Hello from the U.K. I have 2 of these knives, one of which lives in my bedside table or nightstand, just in case, you understand! A fishing buddy bought one and I was so impressed that I bought one too and a few years later, bought a second. They have been a reliable tool for me since I was 14 ( what was then the minimum age to buy a knife in the U.K. at that time, shock, horror). A simple, forgiving good quality item. The second Green River I bought has the serations on the spine and I found this one after a geography lesson with a lady supply teacher who served on an arctic expedition as a young woman. Yes, inspite of the make-up had to source their own food. Good kit!
that Snake Eater is a nice design mate 👍 I've been having the same thoughts with the scandi-into-flat grind myself, surprised that it isn't a more common grind haha
I've been using Green River / Dexter Russell knives for 30 years, and you are right they deserve more credit. I agree they are superior to Ontario / Old Hickory knives. It surprises me more American sportsmen don't recognize these knives. Even old timers have asked me "why did you bring that knife hunting?" Great video. Liked and subscribed. Thanks!
Great video, friend! Have several Russel, Dexter, Forgecraft and Ontario carbon steel knives.. Some old imports, too! No Green Rivers, but like you, I know and appreciate their history and significance! Glad you are encouraging others to buy/build these. Will keep looking for more of your good content, Blsds, gg
I have several green river (Dexter-Russell) knives. I made traditional Native rawhide sheaths for them with beads, tin cones and hair as accent pieces.
👍 I agree these are great knives and do deserve much more attention. Unfortunately, like the original Marbles knives, the handles are too short for 21st Century adult sized hands. Or, at least for my XL glove sized hands. 😀 Thank you for doing this video, I found it both interesting and entertaining.
easy enough to remove the rivets & replace the handle with one the size & shape you need. Well worth the minimal cost & a bit of time. a wood shaft hockey stick makes for a quality, cheap laminated handle material, throw on some epoxy, a few rivets & your good to go. Learned the effectiveness of a hockey stick knife handle from Mors Kochanski, & so if it worked for him & his classes it works for me.
Hey James, thnx for the video, good job Bud. I was looking for a sorta different, good value hunting knife and some how came across Green River Hunter. What quickly drew my attention was its historical frontier nostalgia. Love the old school rawness, simplicity, ease of sharpening carbon steel and the price point. They were made to be a work horse and do it well! Still around after almost a century and still made in the US of A. Whats there not to love! A knife you can use and not have to worry about! Thnx. James
I have been buying these for 20 years. Track Of The Wolf sells them. $12.99 for the Camp blade. I am pretty sure Nessmuck and Kephart knives were a improvement on the basic over the counter Green River. The Green River design was common and the same style blades were made in Sheffield England. Green River were a domestic and mass produced so the regular guy could buy them. I don't think there is a definative reason for the scalops on the Dadley except as decoration. Remember many of the Sgian Dubh had them as well. The handle might be a bit smaller than knives today but they are the same as my old Puukos ans most of the modern ones. I like them better than the Old Hickory because they don't have those stamped marks in the blades. Old Hickory were popular because they were sold everywhere. Any department or dime store sold them. Green River had to be ordered.
First knife I had teaching skills was a 'fish knife' green river had the scale drilled out to be a bearing block. I don't own a green river anymore I think I'll pick a dadley next. The 'sheep skinner' is also a very cool knife. It led to the mountain man saying "to the mark" was from going all the way to the trademark by the hilt.
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We need more GREEN RIVER KNIFES let's do everything we to keep green River knifes around for another 180 years
The irony is that these simple, "primitive" knives will see years of use and be worked into the ground whereas so many ultra modern titanium, magnacut flippers will spend their lives as safe queens.
very true
Sad fact bro, I have a Microtech Spartan and Eric Oches small batch with ti and sv steel. They were both a tip from a client I worked for... Those beautiful blades sit on a display shelf and a 1940s case barlow sits in my pocket with a 70s Shrade Sharpfinger sits on my hip. Interesting what sees use and what is set aside and honored.
I love my green river, the best knife is the one you have with you all the time.
I'll never understand the safe queen mentality, if I buy it, I use it.
@TheWatcher60401 even my winchesters are not safe queens. I'm using my greatgrandpaps 1894 3240. Rifle this year in deer season. I inherited when I was 8 years old. It was made in 1898. I finally found how to reload for it. The rifle is amazing accurate. If I miss a deer it's on me.😊
Thanks!
than kyou so much, my friend!
I'm in my 60's and remember my mom having a Green River butcher knife. I wish I had it now. It looked old back then. Great video.
Made right here in my hometown! I worked there for awhile in secondary. We had a pegboard in my department with reference patterns for probably 200 different knives and tools that they made over the years. The 2212 is still a very popular pattern, I had thousands of those blades pass through my hands while I was there.
that is awesome!
Had my Green River for 10-15 years and basically use it daily. The best knife I've ever owned and scary sharp .
I own modern knives but I own old school knives like that your right about needing more videos like this. Great video
20 years ago, i found an old green river knife, in a leather sheath, in a river bed in the southwestern Utah desert. i used it for survival classes for years. still have it
thats awesome
When you pick up your dadley in the dark and feel the ridges you definitely know where your edge is... Built my own and love it👍🏻
Absolutely ...me too . Those ridges really help out .
I have this Green River knife. I got it in the mid 1980's. It's a great knife for preparing food, skinning animals and other basic outdoors tasks..
Love all my Green Rivers. They are part of my regular rotation.
Those of us in our 70s and 80s can appreciate that a lot of these very knives ended up in our great grandmas kitchen. I sorta inherited one or two of these myself.
The one you showed looks like the knife Doc Holiday used on his card playing friend to help his indigestion.
These are copies of Sheffield trade knives as far as I know. They were exported in barrels, packed in sawdust without sheaths.
Thank you for a great video. These knives actually work, unlike a lot of the modern stuff. Here in Europe, knives like that are still made in Sheffield and Solingen.
It was your channel that first exposed me to Green River Knives a few years back. Otherwise, I'd never heard of them. It is to my understanding that a lot of these earlier knives were without handles and shipped out from the manufacturers a such. It was then up the merchants or buyers to put on the handles for the knives. I appreciate your research and historical insight. Along with that, your channel is one of the very few that actually does real-world, out in the field testing to include game processing when it comes to knife reviews. This really sets you apart from the rest. Keep up the great work, bro!
😅😢😢
appreciate the love my friend. i have a new knife review coming soon
I bought my Green River hunter as a knife blade only at a rendezvous over 30 years ago. I made the handle scales out of a cherry tree limb, and the sheath out of some old Latigo leather from the 1970s. I love this knife.
Nice!! That's the kinda knife I'd love to getta gander at😎👍
Good knife kit to assemble your own.
One thing is for certain, someone raised this young man right, with common sense in blades and no sugar in his tank!
Thanks James,
Great Blades, great history. I would not want to see Green River slowly fade away.
I suspect that Dexter Russell is so prominent in the restaurant industry that they don't worry about the advertising.
its such a shame, they dont embrace their rich legacy and actaully put some effort into promoting their old knives, such a missed opportunity
@@JunkyardFox Agreed
Ive got my great grandpa's old hickory green river knives. About 8 or 10 of them. Dexter Russels these days are the knives that you let the 18 year old prep guy use in the kitchen. Ive cooked and been a meat cutter for 30 years and the industry standard is the forschner victorinox brand of knives.
I love green rivers and they are all I carry while in the woods.
Thank you James for showing a great knife review, I own several of these old knives, plain old carbon steel, easy to use an sharpen, the new stainless knives have their place, but are hard to sharpen, the carbon steel knives just sharpen on a smooth stone out of the river, easy to maintain an use.
Way back when you asked subscribers to give you ideas on knives that we would like you to show on your channel here James , I was the one who recommended the green rivers to you because you liked classic knives and you used them to clean and cook game or fish you caught and thats what I do with mine. They are pretty close to a all around knife be it cleaning game or bushcraft camp chores ect they do it all and at a very modest price point.
Hey Mark I totally agree ; I've had my "Green River" for close to 50yrs now. I received it as a kit for Christmas when I was a young kid, where it became one of the first acquisitions in what would become a life time of knife collecting. In all these years I've never seen an advertisement, and this is the first time I've ever seen them mentioned on you tube, and I've been following follow the bushcraft community for a very long time. I think it's long past time "to give them there due".
Thanks for the great content.
I love when I find one of their knives at a yard sale. It makes my day. I've made micarta and wood handles for mine I have also reshaped a couple to make a belt knife. Fantastic blades...
I've carried a Green River 2022, over 30 years. It looks like a vegetable or paring knife. I made a neck knife sheath for it, and used it for big game, birds, and fish, every chore. Thanks for the video.
I just got one of these and it’s pretty awesome
Great shoutout. I have to concur I have never seen any other youtubers cover this brand. They do deserve more love. The tip style on the hunter (along with the smake eater which followed suit) is pretty much the only tip I like just as much as a traditional drop point since it behaves the same but has a nice twist on the formula.
Own both Green River and Old Hickory as well and like you I prefer the Green River. I have a 6 inch hunter model that is one of my go to woods knives
THANK YOU, JAMES! 🎉
Great video! I have the Dadley and the green river. I put bone handles on the Dadley.
Very cool!
Oh come on James, 0000 steel wool cleans them all! Edit: Dexter has ambassadors for their fishing line, and bbq line, maybe you could request being an ambassador to the hunter/heritage line.
It's a shame to erase the character off of a good carbon steel knife! The patina & not rust shows it is used unlike so many drawer queens out there. I hate seeing naive or ignorant people actually use their knives for a change & then whine when there may be a speck of surface rust, patina, or a ding on the scales. I love coming across an old knife somewhere & wondering the story behind it when I see a dark grey blade, often worn due to years of sharpening and a well used handle.
Really? ill have to reach out to them. id love to be an ambassador for them
Your knife is absolutely stunning. Your design is just perfect.
I got my first one in 1977 very worn but still in use
I've always been a fan of the Dadley pattern knife.
I found an old green river hunter blade blank rusted to hell in the bottom of an old boat. Cleaned off the rust-left the pock marks-and added a catalog handle. One of my favorites
Wow!! Thankyou . The first ever info I have seen on a truly great knife . I too used Maple for a handle on mine ,however I used Birdseye Maple . Can't say enough good about the Green River that Mountain Men used to pay 25 cents for and then complained about the price increase . 1095 gets as sharp as a razor and Old Hickory can't even stand in it's shadow . If that 1095 gets any moisture on it don't turn your back on it though as it will rust quickly . Thankyou again, as this 77 year old dude really appreciates your knowledge .
Yahoo for green river knives! This type of knife, well made for a, good price, used on this continent for centuries simply works. A well used knife with a patina speaks to my heart. Stay out of the cholla!
This is a great video, thanks. This Green River hunter is a design I'm thinking of making. The blade shape lends itself to woodworking as well as slicing, so having a full height convex grind, half height saber convex, and scandi grind would all be applicable with it. Legendary shape.
Very nice knives. Keep pumping out those informational videos . Can't wait for some catch and cook videos.
More to come!
Thank you sir@@JunkyardFox
I’ve been using Green River trade knives for over 50 years. They used to have thicker blades with jimping on the spine close to the handle for thumb placement.I still have one of those and it’s a much better knife than the Old Hickory knives.I have a couple of the more recent Green Rivers that are thinner blades that are great knives as well.The Old Hickory knives are really good knives, but they just don’t compare to the Green River knives in my opinion and experience with them.
Thank you for telling me about these knives. I'm going to get one and try it.
The audio seems good, so far.
Thanks for the great video !
I got the Dadley 2 yrs ago and love it. My only knife I use in the kitchen,, on an every daily use!
I have a couple of either Green Rivers and Russell Knives. Still find them at yard sales and tail gater sales! I find one I keep it.
Hey James, excellent video. I was kinda missing seeing you out and about with your Green River Hunter. But I get it, you had a great opportunity to make your own custom designed knife, the Snake Eater, and I really love the design elements from Green River that you put into it. The Dadley I sent to you has orange osage handles, but they do look like olive wood. Anyway, I absolutely enjoyed this video. Thanks my friend.
i love the blades youve sent us, they are my go to in the kitchen, i just made a pork stew with them last night. we appreciate all your love and support james. new cuervo negro video coming soon
Great video James and thank you for showcasing the Green River Knifes and the history of the company. I was not aware of this brand until today
My Green River is fantastic for processing wild turkey, underrated hunting knives.
Thank you for introducing me to another knife I need to get now. I’ve always have seen them in catalogs but they never really appealed to me until this video. Keep up the good work.
Awesome video, James!
I have a couple of Green Rivers because you introduced me to them. Dexter Cutlery should make you an ambassador and cut you a check 💰💰💰
i may have to email them, id love to be an ambassador for them
Very much look forward to all your videos. Seems we have many of the same interests and they're always very informative thank you.
Me to Green River knives I always used them great blades
Thanks, they are very good knifes. I have many of those knifes for many years.use them for cooking an game cleaning etc.
PS mine look much better😅
Me encanta ese sombrero, amigo!!
Thanks , I own a few OKC knives and will definitely purchase a Green River , stay safe
Right on
Great information, James! I've had one in my cart for a while. Might have to go ahead and pull the trigger on it. Great price for it!
you wont regret it!
You sold me and hear I come. Grean River I come.
I could not agree with you more. I have a green river shinner. I bought as a blade. I put my own oak handles on the knife. The blade sharpens so well and keeps an edge very well. I carry hunting and camping. God bless awsome video. 😊
The knife with the green scales is the Green River SHEATH knife. Robert Duvall used one while filming "Lonesome Dove". I have one with a paracord handle and another in 10 GA. copper scales.
I use a 1940s shapleighs old hickory. Family heirloom... hammer forged, spring steel can't beat it, green river knives are good quality ...
Green River knives are old school perfection. I have scaled many for family and friends they all say they keep a super edge, are easy to maintain and develop a nice patina with use. Scaled a skinner for my brother years ago and his wife took it and is still in her kitchen to this day.
I got into Green River knives in the late 1980s. It's all I've ever used.
I use the file work on the Dadley for scraping my ferro rod. The Dadley is my EDC.
After waffling back and forth for several years, I finally broke down and bought a Green River knife a couple weeks ago. After reading reviews about the knife, many commenting on how crudely finished the handles on the current models are finished, I decided to give one a try, hard to pass up such a legendary knife for $25. The scales, as expected, are finished pretty roughly and have lots of loose fibers, especially in the cut grooves, but a bit of light sandpapering and work with an xacto blade has cleaned it up some. I'll leave the rest to wear away over time with use. Otherwise, it's a very nice useable knife. I look forward to testing it out in the outdoors.
What a awesome collection. Great knives
THANK YOU for this review! My grandfather was a cook and I inherited quite a few old hickory from him. I am aware of green river, but have no direct experiences………. Will DEFINITELY be changing that after such a wonderful video!
Great video. I really like that first knife you showed, I like old looking blades like that. Thanks for helping me spend money😂😂😂
Thanks. I’m a real knife nerd and have never heard of Green River. I love the old timer knives and am a restorer of vintage Western and Scandinavian knives. I will have to pick up one of the Green River blanks to customize. 🔪🎸
I bought a custom knife at a gun show made with a green river blade. It has become one of my favorite skinning knives.
One of my sharpest knives, moose antler handle.
Years ago Cold Steel made versions and i use them every year to skin deer. They are in Carbon V with pinned wood handles. Awesome knives.
I have a red river from cold steel. Very good blade.
@@robertfandel9442 That's what mine are. Bought mine through Cold Steel's Special Projects, back in the 90s. Been buying and using Cold Steel since the late 80s, including 12 years US Army. Tough dang knives. Bought 3 more a week ago. Lol
I have the BK62 (Becker Kephart) and it reminds me of these knives. Fantastic designs that are practical and super comfortable.
I use a green river almost daily!!! Great video!!!
I have always loved the Dadley knife.
I like your new and improved design James you hit it out of the park, only thing for me is the price Ima poor boy but highly recommend it to anyone
My go to bush knife, had it for 45 years plus. Cheers
They do need more attention they are just as good as the old hickory.
Better in my opinion
Love my old Dexter, R. G. Wood, Wilson, Goodell carbon steel knives.
Years ago I found a terribly rusted, deep pitted large butcher blade. I cleaned up only slightly and gave it a sharpening. Wow! The sharpest blade I've ever experienced.
I do like your Snake Eater design but would only want it if it was 1095 and possibly a little thicker.
I have the green river buffalo skinner it's nearly 40 years old 😉
I must admit, that I have a few Old Hickory knives, but I'm yet to own a Green River. I do believe that it's time to rectify that ,. Great video James!
I've always been an Old Hickory fan, thank you for opening my eyes to Green River. I'll have to pick up a couple.
I like the simplicity of the high carbon steels. I like cleaning my baldes and then sticking them into a potaoe for a couple of days, wipe down, oil and use. I have made a couple of Green River kits and have a few other blanks to complete. They are thin and therefore they are great cutters.
I purchased two green river blanks ,15 or so years ago. I put a cocobolo handle on the hunter ,and buckeye wood scales on the buffalo half skinner ,two awesome knives
Both of those types of wood are harder than woodpecker lips, not recomended for being easy to work with
Ordered mine and sanded down the scales to fit my hand better then l forced a nice dark patina on the blade with warm white vinegar to help prevent rusting and then coated the blade with warm olive oil. Great little knives! Mine came very sharp but I cleaned mine up with my warthog sharpener and stropped it on my leather belt and it absolutely shaves!! For a $15 buck knife you can’t beat them!
Hello from the U.K. I have 2 of these knives, one of which lives in my bedside table or nightstand, just in case, you understand! A fishing buddy bought one and I was so impressed that I bought one too and a few years later, bought a second. They have been a reliable tool for me since I was 14 ( what was then the minimum age to buy a knife in the U.K. at that time, shock, horror). A simple, forgiving good quality item. The second Green River I bought has the serations on the spine and I found this one after a geography lesson with a lady supply teacher who served on an arctic expedition as a young woman. Yes, inspite of the make-up had to source their own food. Good kit!
Beautiful knives. I have a 1970s era CVA trade knife like this.
that Snake Eater is a nice design mate 👍 I've been having the same thoughts with the scandi-into-flat grind myself, surprised that it isn't a more common grind haha
I've been using Green River / Dexter Russell knives for 30 years, and you are right they deserve more credit. I agree they are superior to Ontario / Old Hickory knives. It surprises me more American sportsmen don't recognize these knives. Even old timers have asked me "why did you bring that knife hunting?" Great video. Liked and subscribed. Thanks!
Great video, friend! Have several Russel, Dexter, Forgecraft and Ontario carbon steel knives.. Some old imports, too! No Green Rivers, but like you, I know and appreciate their history and significance! Glad you are encouraging others to buy/build these. Will keep looking for more of your good content, Blsds, gg
I just love green rice knives
Green River Awesome knives
I have several green river (Dexter-Russell) knives. I made traditional Native rawhide sheaths for them with beads, tin cones and hair as accent pieces.
Awesome vid, thanks so much!
thanks to you I picked up a hunter and a Skinner with bone handles
👍 I agree these are great knives and do deserve much more attention. Unfortunately, like the original Marbles knives, the handles are too short for 21st Century adult sized hands. Or, at least for my XL glove sized hands. 😀
Thank you for doing this video, I found it both interesting and entertaining.
easy enough to remove the rivets & replace the handle with one the size & shape you need. Well worth the minimal cost & a bit of time. a wood shaft hockey stick makes for a quality, cheap laminated handle material, throw on some epoxy, a few rivets & your good to go. Learned the effectiveness of a hockey stick knife handle from Mors Kochanski, & so if it worked for him & his classes it works for me.
@@harvestblades Good idea on the hockey stick. Thank you for sharing Mors’ suggestion.
Hi James, we’ve chatted before. That crazy crow maple blade of yours is my work. I’m the guy who does them for crazy. Nice to see them being used.
Your Snake Eater design looks awesome
Hey James, thnx for the video, good job Bud. I was looking for a sorta different, good value hunting knife and some how came across Green River Hunter. What quickly drew my attention was its historical frontier nostalgia. Love the old school rawness, simplicity, ease of sharpening carbon steel and the price point. They were made to be a work horse and do it well! Still around after almost a century and still made in the US of A. Whats there not to love! A knife you can use and not have to worry about! Thnx. James
I have been buying these for 20 years. Track Of The Wolf sells them. $12.99 for the Camp blade. I am pretty sure Nessmuck and Kephart knives were a improvement on the basic over the counter Green River. The Green River design was common and the same style blades were made in Sheffield England. Green River were a domestic and mass produced so the regular guy could buy them. I don't think there is a definative reason for the scalops on the Dadley except as decoration. Remember many of the Sgian Dubh had them as well. The handle might be a bit smaller than knives today but they are the same as my old Puukos ans most of the modern ones. I like them better than the Old Hickory because they don't have those stamped marks in the blades. Old Hickory were popular because they were sold everywhere. Any department or dime store sold them. Green River had to be ordered.
Great review! Been interested in them.
Thanks for watching!
Great review 👏, I learned a lot from you today 👍 . Green River, I will keep an 👁 out for them. Ty for sharing 🎉😮😊
First knife I had teaching skills was a 'fish knife' green river had the scale drilled out to be a bearing block. I don't own a green river anymore I think I'll pick a dadley next.
The 'sheep skinner' is also a very cool knife.
It led to the mountain man saying "to the mark" was from going all the way to the trademark by the hilt.