Fireflyfishing
WKR
Havalon knives are a no for me unless I need to do detailed work. After all, you don’t see butchers using scalpels and doctors using butchers knives…food for thought.
Holy shit, that sounds terrifying. Glad it was a miss.A no-cut glove on the hand opposite of the one holding the knife will save your bacon - please don't ask how I know this. I nearly saw a fatality in a gutting/quartering operation on a kid's first mule deer buck. Dad was standing at the buck's head leaned over and holding the front legs open and (for some unknown reason) the kid decided he was going to split the ribcage with a knife. Doesn't take a rocket scientist to predict what was about to happen - that first rib broke under extreme force from the kid and he nearly drove that knife in his follow-through upswing into Dad's throat. It was CLOSE, so close I believed he made contact. Scared the hell out of everyone. And with good cause, we were three miles from a boat to get back across the Snake River to a point that was four hours from McCall. Knives are really dangerous in field situations because we're tired and in a hurry to get an animal in a pack.
This is where I’m at with my type of hunting. No real reason for me to use a scalpel style knife. I bought and played with a few but went back to a drop point folder in my pack for walk in hunts and fixed boning knives if I’m cutting up deer at a camp. Not the most lightweight option but I more comfortable with it.Havalon knives are a no for me unless I need to do detailed work. After all, you don’t see butchers using scalpels and doctors using butchers knives…food for thought.
I picked up some amazon cut resistant gloves for my kit this year. Always seem to nick myself at least once. Hopefully they get some blood on em in a couple weeks. (not mine)FIRM GRIP Large ANSI A5 Cut Resistant Gloves 79007-06 - The Home Depot
FIRM GRIP ANSI A5 Cut resistant gloves provide serious industrial grade cut protection. The performance fitting and breathable knit shell delivers maximum dexterity with all-day comfort that provides grip in any condition. The high visibility color contrasts for lo-Watt light safety and makes...www.homedepot.com
I keep these in my kill kit. ANSI level 5 is about where I think is the best combination of dexterity and protection. ANSI recommends level 6 for meat processing, for what it's worth. At level 8, dexterity is fairly compromised, in my opinion.
Pro's: better grip than nitrile, breathable, protection from incidental knicks, cuts, pokes, keep your hands warm when it's cold, reusable.
I throw them away if they get really fatty or otherwise gross. If they're just bloody, I wash with my game bags.
These gloves probably are not going to fully stop a forceful puncture or slash but they would lessen it.
Done it several times. Clean band aid and a wrap of duct tape. Never had one worse than that.
Correct, but they do like pics of the buck you killed!Me too. Till this time. Gave it a clean bandage tonight. Looks like it went to the bone from what I can tell. Bunch of dead tissue around the cut now. Not posting pics because I don’t think people love that
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For those that have gloves, are you wearing them on both hands or just your non-dominant hand?