- Thread Starter
- #21
Sven Saw and a lighter forest style axe have worked very well for us when we want fires at night.
A Sven Saw was my second choice. I like how tiny they are. Seem like good reviews as well.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Sven Saw and a lighter forest style axe have worked very well for us when we want fires at night.
Silky gomboy is what I take when I pack my stove. Well worth the weight for the comfort and morale boost
I know this isn't what you want to hear but leave your saw, hatchet, stove, etc at home! A fire will coat your clothes with smoke anyways! I hunt from before daylight to after dark and the last thing I want to do at the end of a super long day is find and cut firewood!
The OP s question was about a tool to process wood, not about is it silly or not to have a wood stove. As for the smoke I have hunted deer and elk spots where they are eating out of smoldering slash piles . I find it a good cover scent .My post was merely constructive criticism! I really don't believe there is a need to haul a hatchet or saw into the back country and spend valuable time that I could be hunting and recovering from a hard day in the field cutting/gathering wood....and tending a fire. I would rather use a gas stove and spend my quality time hunting! That makes a lot of sense to me and my style of hunting. It obviously isn't for everyone!
I too am a big fan of the Sven saw. My brother also packs a small hatchet. Between the two of us we have every thing we need.Sven Saw and a lighter forest style axe have worked very well for us when we want fires at night.
They’re hand made, when you have an issue with it you give them a call and you talk to the man who forged it. The steel itself is really good for the purpose (bone chopping). I’ve only had the very top of the blade and the very bottom of the blade roll and that’s from bad strikes at night on bone via headlamp. I’ve had it covered in blood and slick with fat yet still kept a solid grip on it. The blade angle prevents it from getting stuck and it cuts really well. I have hand forged knives just as spendy as the axe, quality has a price. Though to be fair, I’m a buy once cry once kind of guy. When I used a Gerber for bone, the blade chipped and almost the whole cutting edge was gone just doing the ribs.