Boker Knives?

long_range_rob

Well-Known Member
I am thinking of buying a Boker Arkinsas Ranger knife as I may be doing some Fallow work in Nov and my Alan Wood mini hunter is a bit small for the job.

My question is, has anyone bought Boker, are they any good. Is the build quality as good as it looks on the interweb?

​Any thoughts welcome. Cheers
 
Boker knives are good, I've had a couple over the years and currently have two of the knife and fork sets. They are probably a bit overpriced as far as production knives go but but what isn't these days.

I would never try to talk anyone out of buying more knives but I would say that you don't need a big knife for fallow, I use an Alan Wood trout and bird which is ideal even for red deer. Small and slim is good, small and fat is not so good.

Heinie Haynes are a brilliant retailer, you won't go wrong dealing with them. The only problem I've ever had is that they make it too easy to buy!
 
good folders got an optima with a 2nd blade gut hook swap out, nice lock up treated it bad over the years never closed on my fingers yet !
 
I use one of these for everything from Muntjac to Sika: Fixed Blade Knives: Boker Arbolito Relincho Madera --- Heinnie Haynes - Knives, Pocket Tools and Accessories
Its an excellent knife. Cannot fault the build quality in any way, its light with superb edge retention. When I find a folder blade made from this steel I'll buy it. The blade length is ideal for larger deer while the slender profile makes it equally good on smaller species and fiddley jobs. This one is definitely a keeper.

Boker knives are top quality. The Arbolito "Tree-brand" knives are made in Argentina. They're cheaper than the German models but definitely not nastier. The Argies make fine knives and their leatherwork is top notch. I would say you could buy with confidence. The blade edge on mine wasn't polished when I got it. It was razor sharp but I could feel machining on it. All it took was some light stropping to get it silky smooth. I've had it two years de-heading and legging in the field and I've only sharpened it once. It makes my old EKA swingblade look pretty sorry in comparison.
 
Both my son and I have had Bokers for the last 10 years, his has seen far more work than mine and we cant fault them. I have many knives but the Boker is the one I would trust with my life. Moonraker Knives (Tony Davies) is the guy to talk to he stocks Bokers.
Tusker
 
I have a Boker locking folder with wood scales and brass bolsters, not sure of the model, the blade is stamped tree brand and the figure 2000 its a good general purpose knife , but the blade is not the best shape for a stalking knife.
 
+1 On Mora got lot of knifes but mora for day to day easy clean and don't mind useing a [h=1]Fortune Prod 001 Accusharp Knife And Tool Sharpener Knife Sharpener, Pocket size ,very good if its in low light and a plus keeps your fingers away from a very sharp blade. [/h]
Q(For stalking I carry a Mora though.

Heinnie Haynes is a retailer par excellence - quite the best online service I've seen.

willie_gunn[/QUOTE]
 
I like Boker Tree Brand and have two of them. A synthetic handled "Arbito" and a stag handled knife by Boker.
 
I use one of these for everything from Muntjac to Sika: Fixed Blade Knives: Boker Arbolito Relincho Madera --- Heinnie Haynes - Knives, Pocket Tools and Accessories
Its an excellent knife. Cannot fault the build quality in any way, its light with superb edge retention. When I find a folder blade made from this steel I'll buy it. The blade length is ideal for larger deer while the slender profile makes it equally good on smaller species and fiddley jobs. This one is definitely a keeper.

Boker knives are top quality. The Arbolito "Tree-brand" knives are made in Argentina. They're cheaper than the German models but definitely not nastier. The Argies make fine knives and their leatherwork is top notch. I would say you could buy with confidence. The blade edge on mine wasn't polished when I got it. It was razor sharp but I could feel machining on it. All it took was some light stropping to get it silky smooth. I've had it two years de-heading and legging in the field and I've only sharpened it once. It makes my old EKA swingblade look pretty sorry in comparison.

Just got this, gorgeous knife!
 
You guys made me spent a £150 on a knife without having a thought buying one. It's just started seeing this topic, clicked Heinnie Haynes web page. While surfing through knives i fell in love with one of ESEEs and bought it.
😆
 
You guys made me spent a £150 on a knife without having a thought buying one. It's just started seeing this topic, clicked Heinnie Haynes web page. While surfing through knives i fell in love with one of ESEEs and bought it.
😆

You won’t regret buying an ESEE. They’re brilliant, which did you go for?
 
You'd struggle to find a fixed blade knife that's too small for doing what's to do on a fallow. Lady Longstrider once did an entire sheep with the little 'Necker' knife I made her. A massive 2" blade :lol:
If it's properly sharp you can do wonders with a little blade.

Your current blade is an Alan Wood so it's a good one. It'll take a great edge and keep it as well as will anything, so get that properly sharp and see how it fares on the job. You might be surprised at just how efficient it is.
 
It's a little bit far from traditional hunting knives but i love it. It's the most expensive knive that i will be using for gralloching and butchering after Moras.

ESEE 4HM

Its what comes of watching too many You-Tube bushcraft vids!
K
 
It's a little bit far from traditional hunting knives but i love it. It's the most expensive knive that i will be using for gralloching and butchering after Moras.

ESEE 4HM


They are really good knives. Honest carbon steel which is razor sharp and easy to maintain. I use the little Cody Rowen CR2 for dressing pigeon breasts and have done muntjac. Not big enough for the bigger deer really but such a versatile little knife. A quick reprofile made it more suitable for flesh rather than bushcraft and i now cannot find fault with it. Sheath is a bit crap but most of them are and I can make my own, so that is no issue.
 
Worth looking at Cudeman, they make a huge range of knives. Very well made and reasonably priced.
 
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