I'm thinking about changing up my knife game for the season. I currently run a gerber vital folder and small saw in my pack and a benchmade osborne 940 on my hip for field dressing. I usually have the opportunity to gut in field but haul out and then skin and debone in the shop later. At the shop I almost exclusively use differing size fillet or boning knives.
That being said I have a scheels gift card burning a hole in my pocket and was eyeing a benchmade steep country. Looks like nice size and everyone talks highly of. But I find myself going back to what I know and eyeing something along the lines of a 5-6" Victorinox curved boning knife.
My question is what do the traditional hunting knifes like the steep country provide or lose compared to a boning knife? When I first started hunting my dad always carried a serrated cutco long blade hunting knife and thats what I started on as well but that got old quick once I was on my own.
It sounds like you are not hell bent on buying a knife to hand down, you just want the most practical tool.
I have been all over the board on knives and own a pile, high end production knives, custom knives, and everything else trying to find the perfect combo
About 15 years ago I started using a havalon almost exclusively, but have bought several knives since trying to replace it, now use a tyto (same concept)
I hate sharpening in the middle of a critter, no way to get the blade clean usually, so you are fouling your sharpener with dried meat from the blade and generally fighting it, and unless you have a pretty elaborate sharpening system, you probably aren’t getting it back to super sharp (especially a hard steel like s90v)
For the weight of a worksharp guided field sharpener, you could carry another 2-3 knives. I have a BM altitude, and it will not stay sharp enough through a whole elk, so that’s why I keep going back to the tyto, no down time, always a sharp knife, I can get through an elk with 2 blades with a little strategy
I’m going to try one more knife, the day 6 dragonfly, it seems to address the issue I have with knives, but we’ll see. My knives in the field vs processing at home are vastly different, I like fillet/boning knives at home processing, but wouldn’t ever pack one for breaking critters down in the field
The only knife that I would consider as a primary field knife is my dalstrong shogun series paring knife, but I need a new handle put on, but the blade steel is by far my favorite for field use, it holds an edge really well, and takes an edge extremely well