"Made with infinite care by our most expert old craftsmen,
and 'actually made far better than is necessary.”
How to Buy an Outdoor Knife by George Leonard Herter
An outdoor knife must be made for service--not show. Your life may depend on it. Real outdoor people realize that so-called sportsmen or outdoor knives have long been made for sale, not for use. The movies and television show their characters wearing fancy sheath knives. Knife makers advertised them and drugstore outdoorsmen bought them. Nothing marks a man to be a tenderfoot more than these showy useless knives.
Here are some of the duties a true woodsman knife must perform:
1. The knife must stay sharp for long periods of time without sharpening. The steel should combine the best characteristics of electric furnace quality high carbon 1095 steel and high carbon 440 B stainless steel. The blade hardness, known among steel experts as 56 Rockwell C, should not be affected by atmospheric moisture, salt spray, fruit acids or blood. It should withstand extreme temperatures without becoming brittle, no matter how cold it may be. A good steel knife blade will "blue" or darken itself with use, making it pratically rustproof. If knife blade steel is really good, it will cut through nails without bending over the edge.
SBW 56 Rockwell is a bit soft if you're wanting a knife that 'must stay sharp for long periods of time without sharpening'. 440 isn't that good by today's standards
2. The knife must be shaped so it is ideal for cleaning and skinning game of all kinds, from rabbits to moose. The best shape for this is the improved Bowie.
SBW Apparently you had to have one of these to be a "real" outdoorsman. Other knives were just for novices and often as not “like they were made by indifferent schoolgirls.”
3. The knife must have a handle long enough so that it fits a man's hand so pressure can be put on the blade when desired. On nearly all outdoor knives the handles are much too short. The handle of the knife must be made to last a lifetime. Leather handles rot and mildew, stag handles crack, plastic handles crack and are highly flammable. African mineral-type woods are best, and they will stand all kinds of weather for a lifetime and more.
SBW But it's ok if the fight doesn't work out, because as george has reasured us
"Most people don't realize that being eaten by a hyena doesn't hurt very much".
3. The knife must have a handle long enough so that it fits a man's hand so pressure can be put on the blade when desired. On nearly all outdoor knives the handles are much too short. The handle of the knife must be made to last a lifetime. Leather handles rot and mildew, stag handles crack, plastic handles crack and are highly flammable. African mineral-type woods are best, and they will stand all kinds of weather for a lifetime and more.
SBW I guess plastics have moved on a bit
4. The blade of the knife must not be hollow ground. Hollow grinding weakens a blade so that the edge will bend or break under heavy usage. A wedge edge is the strongest and most durable ever designed.
4. The blade of the knife must not be hollow ground. Hollow grinding weakens a blade so that the edge will bend or break under heavy usage. A wedge edge is the strongest and most durable ever designed.
SBW No George that would be the convex edge. More metal behind the cutting edge init.
5. The blade of the knife must be hand forged in order to give the steel maximum strength and hardness.
SBW I guess steels have moved on a bit too
6. The blade of the knife must not have a blood groove. A blood groove is strictly advertising and badly weakens the blade. Professional butchers do not use them.
SBW I make you right.
7. The knife must be easy to carry and light in weight. The blade length must be 4 inches long. Four inches is the length established for a woodsman knife by over 200 years of experience. Blades shorter are all right for Boy Scouts, but not for serious woodsmen, Longer than 4 inches is unnecessary and adds weight.
5. The blade of the knife must be hand forged in order to give the steel maximum strength and hardness.
SBW I guess steels have moved on a bit too
6. The blade of the knife must not have a blood groove. A blood groove is strictly advertising and badly weakens the blade. Professional butchers do not use them.
SBW I make you right.
7. The knife must be easy to carry and light in weight. The blade length must be 4 inches long. Four inches is the length established for a woodsman knife by over 200 years of experience. Blades shorter are all right for Boy Scouts, but not for serious woodsmen, Longer than 4 inches is unnecessary and adds weight.
SBW apart from the one you're selling eh George!
8. The knife should have no hilt as it only adds weight. If the knife blade is properly designed, that is slightly indented, you cannot cut your finger no matter how hard you thrust. You need only thrust in a hand to hand combat with a man or a wounded animal.
8. The knife should have no hilt as it only adds weight. If the knife blade is properly designed, that is slightly indented, you cannot cut your finger no matter how hard you thrust. You need only thrust in a hand to hand combat with a man or a wounded animal.
SBW But it's ok if the fight doesn't work out, because as george has reasured us
"Most people don't realize that being eaten by a hyena doesn't hurt very much".
From The Truth About Hunting in Today's Africa (1963)
9. The knife must be capable of slicing bacon and cutting bread. It must be a comfortable knife for eating and cutting cooked meat.
SBW If you've run out of cash for new knives, not to worry Mr Herter also published
“Milking Scorpions Brings You $150 or More a Week.” Please post a video of your attempts!
More soonish
SBW
9. The knife must be capable of slicing bacon and cutting bread. It must be a comfortable knife for eating and cutting cooked meat.
SBW If you've run out of cash for new knives, not to worry Mr Herter also published
“Milking Scorpions Brings You $150 or More a Week.” Please post a video of your attempts!
More soonish
SBW
I've got one of Herter's cookbooks and "barking" is about the perfect description of it...
ReplyDeleteYou choose the recipe, email it to me, and I'll cook it.
ReplyDeleteSBW
You're milking the scorpions
ReplyDeleteSBW
I used to have one of those laurel-leaf style knives the design of which Herter stole from someone else. It was one of the best knives I ever had and for only about $4. It disappeared years ago; wish I still had it.
ReplyDeleteSome nice looking blades there. I prefere the older style butcher blade like these.
ReplyDeletehttp://woodsrunnersdiary.blogspot.com/
No hilt? I prefer to milk the scorpions... :)
ReplyDeleteWhen you see someone with a knife that looks 100 years old and you could not buy it from them. You know that is a good knife. I agree no matter how good it looks, if it does not stay sharp it is no value to me....
ReplyDeleteWhy not make your own knife , i have just finished making a knife for when i am out rough shooting , just have the sheath to make . There are plenty of knife kits out there to suit all pockets and can be made with a minimun mount of tools and experience . And great satisfaction can be had from making your own knife . My knife kit only cost £28.95 .
ReplyDeleteThrough the lens
ReplyDeleteFunny you should say that............TBC
SBW
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believe simply hhow much time I had spent for this info!
Thanks!