Sunday, 20 July 2014

Stuart Mitchell's Muntjac


While at Andy's he showed me this sweet little stalking knife by Stuart Mitchell of Shefield.
Mr Mitchell is a legend on this side of the pond, I've coveted his work since I first saw some pix on BCUK years ago. This model, his smallest and most every-day-carry, is named after the smallest deer in the UK, which is also the species you can hunt 365 days a year.


Standing 20in/500mm tall these little deer are pretty cute, at a distance. A bit closer its a different story, they have FANGS, yep fangs! Long enough and sharp enough to pose a significant risk to everything more loveable than a pit bull. They are also extremely territorial and indeed aggressive.
Introduced by the Duke of Bedford around 1900 they've spread a long way in the last 100 years, even 'swimming' the Irish sea. I've hunted them unsuccessfully a couple of times, and eaten them very successfully a few more times.

To mention the price of commisioning an SM in the presence of wives past and present is to elicit shrieks of dismay. I think his prices are very reasonable when you consider his 30+ years of practice, and workshop full of machines, especially when you set them against the prices of some production knives.

So what's it like in the hand? In a word, Ergonomic.
In a few more; fit and finish are so flawless as to be almost other-worldly.
Double want one.

Elfa "Think of the huntings you can do for that money"
SBW "Exactly, you've never eaten Muntjac have you? You're gonna love it"
And people wonder why I put up with her!

More soon, your pal
SBW

Some pix of his work HERE
Website, Facebook ect 

15 comments:

  1. When the significant other talks to you about bespoke gear in terms of hunting adventures you have won.

    I mean it- won.

    Last year I considered a very nice custom rifle...Mrs. Hodgeman declared I could go on a stellar flyout hunt for the cost....well, I didn't get the rifle but I get on the plane late Aug.

    'nuff said.

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  2. That looks like the perfect backcountry knife. Small and handy for skinning and the finer work inside... I like it. Add that to my "Want" list too.

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  3. Chaps
    She wasn't so happy to see the hat back
    SBW

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  4. Don't like it at all, just too practical looking...

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  5. Chad
    you have the same problem as me, plagued by dichotomy:
    You are a gentlemen of refined taste, with the fiscal wherewithal of a hobo.

    In less dichotomic times Mr Mitchell could, for a modest consideration, equip the gentleman stalker with a knife to the same pattern, rendered in Odin's Eye damasteel and fine english walnut, perhaps supplied by one's gun maker, achieving a charming match to the gentleman's sporting battery.

    But as discussed, modern life is rubbish, so this is unlikely to happen, unless we are fortunate enough to book a safari to hunt skeins of pigs as they take flight over the frozen wastelands of hell. Bah!

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  6. "modern life is rubbish" -- heh. I want that knife.

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  7. Sten
    For me and many others who make their livings from the land and the birds and beast that land supports a knife is a working tool.
    I have admired Stuarts work for years, but the prices he charges are unbelievable. Anyone would think his blades are made from unobtainium not commercially available tool steels.

    Atb

    Clem

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  8. Clem
    Have you ever handled one? His work is very very good, and his costs go way beyond the materials. if I had the good fortune to be in that spending bracket i wouldn't think his prices unreasonable; have you seen the price of a reasonably nice wristwatch lately, especially in contrast to other small volume manufacture items like a nice waterproof jacket or rucksack? Not to mention that titanium canteen I reviewed a while back LOL

    As i once had to tell a client who spluttered at the projected costs of building the bathroom she'd designed "you 'can' complete your ablutions with a bucket, a car-washing sponge, a jubilee clip and a couple of meters of secondhand hosepipe. But....'

    SBW

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  9. where arrrrre you?????

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  10. Sleek and sturdy looking. It's almost Christmas...definitely asking the wifey for it!

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  11. How do they compare in taste to white tail? Are the back straps just as good in these deer as a whitey or muley??

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  12. CamoGuy
    The little deer have a less iron-y taste, Roe can be almost sugary, Whitetail reminds be of Red/Fallow, Munty's less 'strong' for want of a better word

    Feliz Navidad from Spain
    SBW

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  13. CamoGuy
    The little deer have a less iron-y taste, Roe can be almost sugary, Whitetail reminds be of Red/Fallow, Munty's less 'strong' for want of a better word

    Feliz Navidad from Spain
    SBW

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  14. How Did Stuart get into this? How he got the idea to start this?

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  15. Dr L
    my understanding is that he learned his culturing skills working in his family business from his dad
    He posts on British Blades where you can see a lot more of his work.
    SBW

    ReplyDelete

Please feel free to leave comments. I really enjoy hearing what readers think. The rules are the same as round my dinner table:

You're welcome to disagree, life would be way too boring if we all agreed with each other and we'd never learn anything.
I like to think that we're all grown up enough to argue every last point, right down to the bone, without bearing a grudge afterwards.



Come on in the waters lovely
SBW