What knives do you carry on your hunt?

What knives do you carry hunting?


  • Total voters
    244
Joined
Feb 21, 2020
Messages
428
Benchmade Steep Country in the kill kit. Love it.

Benchmade Mini Osborne in the pocket. Pricey, but light, good steel and I had some gift cards to burn. Any folding knife would do for chores around camp. I save the edge on my fixed blade for the animal.
 
Joined
Oct 12, 2021
Messages
12
I've always carried l more traditional skinning knives. But, I've lately switched over to the ESEE line of knives. They are more of "do all" while out in the wild!
 

Savage99

WKR
Joined
Jan 26, 2017
Messages
435
Location
CO
Are the mora knives as easy to sharpen as they look? I used one I bought my dad on an antelope recently and it worked great. I received a buck Selkirk as a gift, but haven’t packed it in yet, it’s a little heavy.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Joined
Oct 11, 2021
Messages
8
Benchmade Steep Country in the kill kit. Love it.

Benchmade Mini Osborne in the pocket. Pricey, but light, good steel and I had some gift cards to burn. Any folding knife would do for chores around camp. I save the edge on my fixed blade for the animal.
Does benchmade hold an edge well?
 

RedTimber

FNG
Classified Approved
Joined
Jul 12, 2021
Messages
37
Over the past few years I have been making due with whatever I have laying around the house. Last year I dressed and quartered a handful of whitetails using a $15 Mora. It worked OK. I have a little bit of extra cash laying around and decided that I want to upgrade the knives that I carry into the woods.

I just purchased a Havalon and was considering buying a general purpose fixed blade. ESEE caught my eye. I am considering purchasing an Izula II or ESEE 3 to compliment the Havalon. Does anyone have any experience with those knives. Do you have another knife that you might recommend? I'm trying to stay under $100.
Havalon piranta + Dawson Javalina is my current set up. Have had good experiences with Buck open season series and SOG knives if you're trying to stay under 100$. Stay with fixed blades for strength.
 

Kelleyss

FNG
Joined
Apr 23, 2020
Messages
11
Over the past few years I have been making due with whatever I have laying around the house. Last year I dressed and quartered a handful of whitetails using a $15 Mora. It worked OK. I have a little bit of extra cash laying around and decided that I want to upgrade the knives that I carry into the woods.

I just purchased a Havalon and was considering buying a general purpose fixed blade. ESEE caught my eye. I am considering purchasing an Izula II or ESEE 3 to compliment the Havalon. Does anyone have any experience with those knives. Do you have another knife that you might recommend? I'm trying to stay under $100.
I switched to the Randy Newberg ESB last year and I couldn't be more impressed. I did one decent muley, a cow elk, and my bull from this year (all gutless) with one set of those knives. Granted that 3 different blades come with it, but they outperformed anything that I've used before.
 
Joined
Feb 21, 2020
Messages
428
Does benchmade hold an edge well?

Mine has held an edge really well. Probably depends on the steel they use for each knife model.... but I think they use higher quality steel on all their stuff.

My Steep Country was used to skin and de-bone 2 elk. All I needed to keep it shaving sharp was a fine ceramic rod and a leather strop (Work Sharp Field Sharpener). Touch8ng up the blade was quick and easy and made all that work a much more enjoyable.

The Mini Osborne is new, so I don't have much experience with it. But, it was very sharp out of the box. It has the same steel as the Steep Country (S30V), so I expect it to hold up well.
 
Last edited:

tuffcity

WKR
Joined
Nov 2, 2013
Messages
583
Location
YT
I carry a stout little Marttiini (Finland) that I bought in 1982 and miraculously still have. First knife I ever paid around a $100 for.
Also a custom Don Stevenson caper my daughter bought for me a few years ago.

GuTdwG7.jpg
 

Sakohunter264

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Apr 5, 2020
Messages
292
Lucas Forge. Hard to find a better knife.
 

Attachments

  • 69F27335-C77E-4777-A458-A53104D47937.jpeg
    69F27335-C77E-4777-A458-A53104D47937.jpeg
    505.8 KB · Views: 51
  • 34F42CBB-D29A-4BD2-898E-F1E1510E36D6.jpeg
    34F42CBB-D29A-4BD2-898E-F1E1510E36D6.jpeg
    400.6 KB · Views: 50

rob86jeep

WKR
Joined
Dec 19, 2017
Messages
611
Location
Georgia
Havalon type knife and a fixed blade knife. The Havalon makes processing game easier but you should never be in the back country without a fixed blade, full tang, knife. It will process game if needed, but also can be used for a variety of other reasons that may keep you alive in an emergency. Personally, I carry a Havalon and an ESEE IZULU or ESEE 4 (depending on if I have a wood stove or no stove).
 

grfox92

WKR
Joined
Mar 14, 2017
Messages
2,762
Location
NW WY
Hard to beat a Morakniv for $15.

Held an edge through 2 back to back antelope with out touching the blade.

Sent from my Pixel 3 using Tapatalk
 

Titan_Bow

WKR
Joined
Dec 10, 2015
Messages
1,152
Location
Colorado
For me, it’s hard to beat an Outdoor Edge Razor Lite. You can get filet knife blades for them, gut hook blades or standard blades. I took my last elk from field to packaged meat with just that one knife, no problem. I like to skin and quarter with the standard blades then use the filet blades to process and butcher meat once I’m home. Hard to beat in my opinion. I know people get used to what they got, but I tried a havalon last week with some friends on an antelope and like the more “traditional” feel of the Outdoor Edge standard blade. I feel they both are scary sharp when new.
I can usually get a deer quartered and broken down with 2 blades, one if I really needed to. An elk takes 3 sometimes 4. The key selling point for me though is the filet knife blades that fit into the same knife. Those things are sweet and make butchering at home a piece of cake!


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Top