Knife of choice

bline

FNG
Joined
Nov 11, 2016
Messages
69
Location
Montana
I couldn't resist the 40 dollar price tag. Little extra money from PayPal just disappeared, ordered the thumb skinner to try.

I bet you'll like it, I've never handled one of his thumb skinners though. Did you get a sheath for it too?


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Lawnboi

WKR
Joined
Mar 2, 2012
Messages
7,746
Location
North Central Wi
I bet you'll like it, I've never handled one of his thumb skinners though. Did you get a sheath for it too?


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I did not, Iv got plenty of sheaths laying around. Looks nice and I like the style. I'm familiar with 1095, and the shape looks good for a hunting knife. Should be light being its made of thinner stock
 

Lawnboi

WKR
Joined
Mar 2, 2012
Messages
7,746
Location
North Central Wi
This is not meant to ruffle any feathers. But after getting two of the Jeff white knives I'd discourage others.

Both knives came with problems, that I will have to fix. The thumb skinner has a wave at the rear of the blade, making stropping imposingly near the end of it, I'll need to straitened that out, and there is no point, it's totally rounded. The other knife I got from him, is without a doubt the most poorly finished knife Iv seen, and is worthy of the 40 dollar price tag. Looks like the front of the knife was used to chop a rock. The knife was shipped to me with a chip and an unfinished edge on one side. The patina is non existent on one side and just splashed on the other, leaving a rough ugly finish. The handle is not near the thumb skinner but looks like it was carved with a knife and lightly sanded. This knife will take major work to fix and is the reason I will never buy another one from him. The thumb skinner is a great blade shape, and once fixed up I'll give it a go on a whitetail this fall.

I'll stick with bark river or custom.
 
Joined
May 28, 2016
Messages
7
I collected knives before I really started hunting. For the last three years this has been my go to skinning knife. It seems to be a touch bigger than what most guys use but I like it and it's not so big that it's cumbersome on an inconvenience.

My busse combat HG55
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ghunter3

FNG
Joined
Sep 17, 2017
Messages
12
Benchmade is my choice for every day carry to hunting knife to skinning. Great knives

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TTT

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jan 24, 2020
Messages
220
Location
Oklahoma
Benchmade Hidden Canyon Hunter for deer and such. I would add a Dexter Russell S125 (actually a knife for fish cleaning) for larger animals.
 
Joined
Jan 15, 2020
Messages
23
Outdoor Edge Razor Blaze. Has the replacement blades like the Havalon but a little stouter and easier to use than the Havalon for me. Been using it a couple years now and really like it.

+1 on this. Was skeptical at first but am now sold on them for in the field work. If I have an animal hanging I use a 5” victorianox boning knife.
 

stonewall

WKR
Joined
Jul 29, 2016
Messages
716
Location
TX - Texas
I like havalon in backpack. Also like those little victronix (sp?) pairing knives. They’re about 5-10$. The curved blade helps for caping
 
Joined
Sep 11, 2017
Messages
1,191
Location
Bozeman, MT
White river backpacker. This little beauty handles much larger than its size, and is extremely comfortable and safe when slick with blood. everything I've ever needed for deer/elk. Small and light for backcountry use, holds an edge like crazy, and easy to touch up. I also carry a Tyto for some fine work when a flexible blade has advantages such as pulling backstraps ect.
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Joined
Nov 16, 2018
Messages
70
Location
Colorado
North Arm Lynx.

But I often carry a Outdoor Edge knife and saw combo as well. The saw is nice for sawing off ribs, which I sometimes do.
 
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