This , just get the yellow onehttps://www.amazon.com/Sagen-Hunter...4183&sr=8-1-fkmr0&keywords=sagen+field+saw+II
I use the Sagen field saw. It's light and awesome. They make a larger model which is better for bigger animals. It's yellow rather than orange.
I like the Gerber replaceable blade saw. It has 2 blades; one for wood, one for bone. It's light.
This saw doesn't work as good as the Wyoming saw as you get a lot more leverage with those- but those are heavy. It does work better than the little short saws like the sagen when one something like an elk or big mule skull.
Seems to me those short saws are for splitting the pelvis...but who even does that anymore?
My thoughts also. And I've never had a problem zipping through the cartilage next to the sternum on a whitetail, takes about 5 secs with a sturdy (not Havalon style) knife.What is the point of splitting the pelvis? I've heard of guys doing it but never understood why.
I only hunt out west and I was wishing for a bone saw when I was packing out last years bull. It was just a spindly wide 6x6. Not worth packing that skull all the way to camp. It took 2 days to get it all to camp from harvest site. I finally got a saw back to camp from the truck when I started shuttling meat to the truck. Capping that skull might not seem like much to you studs, but for me it made my last load packing out camp with horns seem easy.
I only hunt out west and I was wishing for a bone saw when I was packing out last years bull. It was just a spindly wide 6x6. Not worth packing that skull all the way to camp. It took 2 days to get it all to camp from harvest site. I finally got a saw back to camp from the truck when I started shuttling meat to the truck. Capping that skull might not seem like much to you studs, but for me it made my last load packing out camp with horns seem easy.
Not bad! I will give this a try. I have a pile of blades laying around. Thanks for posting