Gunter337
Member
I'm using the Benchmade Hidden canyon Hunter and love itChristmas is coming fast, and want to get some of the amazing men in my life a really good hunting knife.
Open to any recommendations, not looking for folding knives.
I'm using the Benchmade Hidden canyon Hunter and love itChristmas is coming fast, and want to get some of the amazing men in my life a really good hunting knife.
Open to any recommendations, not looking for folding knives.
Amazing suggestions, thanks again.
You know, I recently bought an outdoor edge with a few replaceable blades and after using it on a elk recently, feel it was a waste of money. The steel in the blades is garbage. While it takes an edge really well and gets super sharp when I sharpen it, the steel is super soft and dulls extremely fast. On top of that, the blades don't come from the factory all that sharp and I have to sharpen them before use anyway. While its nice to be able to replace the blade when it gets dull, you have to do it alot just to get through gutting/ skinning an elk. When your fingers are slick with blood and fat, the last thing you want to do is risk getting cut trying to wrestle out a blade that's stuck in there from a little dried blood. Id rather just carry a few knives (each with different purpose) like I always have than put up with that junk.I'm a knifemaker and I still liked having one of those detachable scalpel blade knives on my elk hunt.
I have been using this little saw for years, I'm really happy with it... the blade is a quality high carbon steel that's still sharp after at least 10 elk.@Small Lady
A little diversion from your request. Most of guys I shoot and hunt with here TX already have their favorite knives. But, a great number of them don't have a saw in their pack.
If the guys in your life are into breaking through the pelvic bone and the chest, this little guy works very well. Typical Japanese product, it is made very well.
Silky Professional Series PocketBoy Curved Blade Folding Saw 130mm Large Teeth (726-13) Amazon product ASIN B077Z3KKSR
Darryle, excellent advice! Knives are very personal tools.I would suggest you take everything that has been suggested and then study each of the recipients. If they carry a knife daily and you are close enough to to observe how they use it, you can better tailor the gift to exactly how they use or need it.
I carry a MKC Fieldcraft EDC, it's a little back up for those moments when you need a quick deploy knife that may save your life. I also carry a Trapper folder for those daily chores of slicing my apple, jerky or cutting a cord/zip tie at work or around the farm. My favorite and the one that holds the edge the longest is a 30+ yr old Hen and Rooster with stag scales, 2nd favorite is a old Case Trapper with Bois D'arc scales.
Every man uses a knife differently, we make concessions when we choose one, because, like rifle calibers, they are a personal choice and there is no perfect caliber or knife for any two men.
I just don't want to see you spend money on a knife they deem to pretty to carry or not useful for their purposes.
I have full custom knives, custom "production" knives and everyday production knives, each fills a different need.
If they don't carry the knife you choose would it upset you or leave you doubtful about the choice. I know that Christmas is fast approaching, but the gift will be more meaningful to them if they see the effort and thought behind it versus the choice. The old cliché line, "it's the thought that counts" is the actual gift that most people overlook.
Good luck, you have your work cutout for you.
Just a few of the different choices I have made. Some I carry/did carry daily, others stay with my hunting gear.
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Since the Benchmade stick knives are a little out of your budget, at $250-300. I'd go with the Esse-4 (4 being the approximate length of blade, it's actually around 4.3") The Esse will set you back right at $200. Another good knife made in USA is the Gerber Prodigy survival knife. Regular $100, on sale right now on their site for $65 I believe.I expect to pay between $100 and $200 each for a good knife, since many have asked about budget.