Officially the best knife for stalking that money can buy.

Put the knife into the neck behind the windpipe under the chin, twist so the blade is facing outwards and cut therefore you’re technically cutting the deer’s throat instead of trying to find an irritating Atlas joint that if you do not get right you create more suffering than needed.

I’ve been doing it that way for as long as I’ve been stalking
Ah I see. I only go after the atlas to remove the head when they are being dismantled.
Thoroughly agree on dispatch that is exactly how I do it .
 
Never ever wash my knives in a dishwasher. I was told it takes the edge off.

Mine's done several muntjac, roe bucks and a couple of red stags since I bought it. Couldn't say how many sharpens as I don't keep a diary but I shot two spikers together and sorted them with it without a sharpen inbetween.

I find muntjac bucks are the worst for blunting any knife where roe cut like butter.
I did a muntjac buck with two mora knives , sharpening as I went and then did a fallow pricket - the pricket was a revelation in how much easier to peel and then take apart, with only minimal sharpening.
 

With

https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/33580518...zs07jFHtnjkOF2DXbqhNOc+gI=|tkp:Bk9SR66z95fiZg


Even cheaper than a Mora and a prettt decent blade profile as well. I can find where it was but I bought a few for £8 each a few years back.
 
I was looking at buying that this week for another cheap general stalking knife. Specifically the Morakniv basic 546 13626 stainless but in black and orange. However the scandi grind put me off. I have big hands but find a 80mm blade perfect to align with my finger tip. How do you find the blade?
I'm afraid I've yet to use it.😳 Yet another "it looks cool and might come in handy one day" purchase but in reality is set to languish at the back of an ammo safe!😐

K
 
Where can I find out the other ways of doing it? Never seen it done the same way twice - hence my confusion..,
Easiest way I’ve found to remove a head is to pull the chin back so that the deer is ‘looking up’ and exposing as much throat as possible then cut following the jaw bone.

The jaw has a bit of a corner on it at the back, start at the corner and cut towards the spine. You’ll get to the atlas joint but at the front rather than the back if that makes sense? It’s head will just fall off.
 
So the handle came loose not broken as I mentioned if it breaks you don't get a replacement knife

Snap-on repair tools if they are broken, I have a few waiting to get chopped over. Back in the day when we spent a good few quid with them even if you had abused it he would swap it...

I would say if you sent an high end expensive knife back with a lump out of the cutting face It would not be replaced :tiphat:
Snap On tools, made in the Far East? Bling for apprentices to drool over. If you cant hit a spanner with a lump hammer, or a piece of tubing for extra purchase, then there is no point. I broke 2 S O breaker bars, then I bought a cheap Sealey.ten years later it still works.
 
For breaking down animals and meat, Ive got a knife off the lads at the local abattoir, theyre like £10 to £20.

If theyre good enough for the lads butchering dozens of cows a day then theyre definitely good enough for me.
A sensible approach, especially if you're home butchering/working in the larder 👍

To be fair though the food industry uses soft and easy to resharpen steels so anybody can rip a new edge onto them of course this is fine if you have a steel chained round your waist or on a nearby bench but that not really what the falky is designed for.
Ever broken down a moose in the field? I have on day 8 of a 10 day trip having carried all my equipment with me for a week. It was a blessing to have a knife that held an edge for the duration. It’s still a blessing now when I’m doing home kill and butchery not to keep reaching for a steel
fair point made here as well, - Knives, as other tools, have their specific area, in which they work best. :) 👍

i do normally bring a little sharpening stone with me, that can be used both dry and wet, but yep, i'd rather not have to use it, in the field, at low light if i can avoid it. An almost smooth little steel, would also be handy tbh.


Personally i use a mora companion in the field, but if i found the right other knife, even if it was a crafted and more expensive one, i would definitely consider that too. With knives it's also quite personal, about what sort of blade profile and length one prefers, how they fit in your hand and balance and so on.
 
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Always preferred my swing blade.
Unbeatable.
how do you find that they clean? folding and swing blades knives have pockets of space in them, and i have always just stayed away from them, thinking that they'd be more of a hassle to keep proper clean. But perhaps i am mistaken.:-|
 
Snap On tools, made in the Far East? Bling for apprentices to drool over. If you cant hit a spanner with a lump hammer, or a piece of tubing for extra purchase, then there is no point. I broke 2 S O breaker bars, then I bought a cheap Sealey.ten years later it still works.
I don't care what you think, a huge % of stalking kit is made in the far east and people buy it along with most small goods in our houses

90% of my kit was brought from 1980> 2010 just looked a blue point and snap on multi Allen keys say "Made in the USA"

Question for you would you expect a £100 stalking knife you snap giving it a bit of stick to be replaced no quibble foc "V" a £100.00
Snap on ratchet ?
 
I don't care what you think, a huge % of stalking kit is made in the far east and people buy it along with most small goods in our houses

90% of my kit was brought from 1980> 2010 just looked a blue point and snap on multi Allen keys say "Made in the USA"

Question for you would you expect a £100 stalking knife you snap giving it a bit of stick to be replaced no quibble foc "V" a £100.00
Snap on ratchet ?
Tim, not having a go at you, your an engineer, you are entitled to buy any tools you like, if you like em, then all well & good. Americans made good tools back in the day, I got some old snap on stilsons here that have had 5ft scaffold tube pushed over the handle, still good,
cheers. If I were to break a hundred pound knife, it would go in the bin, why would I want another.
 
Tim Both will last a lifetime if used properly.
The question was if it broke as things break! I fix stuff all the time that has broken the last item was a stem from a chandelier when it was being moved in a building refurb the item before that was a hardox cultivator leg so from 1.5mm to 25mm broke with neither having a warrantee lol
:doh:
 
Tim, not having a go at you, your an engineer, you are entitled to buy any tools you like, if you like em, then all well & good. Americans made good tools back in the day, I got some old snap on stilsons here that have had 5ft scaffold tube pushed over the handle, still good,
cheers. If I were to break a hundred pound knife, it would go in the bin, why would I want another.
Yes, you are quite right...:tiphat:
 
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