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Thread: An admission that will likely draw scorn.

  1. #21

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    I sometimes carry just a juice s2 but it feels a little boring

  2. #22
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    Tupelo,Oklahoma
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    2,683
    I feel to a certain extent the same way. Deep down inside we all have an inner minimalist. With that being said it's a lot of fun (for me anyhow) to try out and use a lot of different blades and tools and is great fun in itself. Half the enjoyment in any hobby is finding out what works and what doesn't .

  3. #23
    I think you nailed it! My "inner minimalist" is constantly losing out to my "whoa,cool! I want one!" side which is louder AND more convincing!!! LOL.

  4. #24
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Location
    Central Florida
    Posts
    2,337
    No scorn; fingernail clippers could take care of my knife-duties in the office.
    Sonny

  5. #25
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Bethesda, MD
    Posts
    2,777
    Most people could do with a single knife with a smallish blade, but it's the emergency use that many consider. I know of one guy who pried open a theater door during a fire alarm using a tanto blade. His partner went back to the patrol car to get some tools, but this guy used his folding knife to pry the door open. True, a duty knife is expected to be strong and dependable, but no one knows when an emergency is likely to come up.

    Another man cut a woman free when her scarf got caught in an escalator. The scarf was choking her and she most likely would have died had not he been able to cut her free. Knives are one of the oldest tools of man, and they still can come in handy on occasion. Me, I got turned in for having a knife at work. One of the secretaries couldn't open a very large flat package that was taped up. I opened it with my knife, which was just a 3-inch CS Voyager, and later that day I got a call from my boss wanting to see me. She said one of the secretaries had become alarmed by the knife and she asked why I had it. I reminded her that I had used it to open a package. I also told her the knife was within the legal limits and she interrupted me and told me that I didn't need a knife at work and to please leave it at home. When I left her office, I promised to obey all laws and to be more discreet in the future, but I didn't promise to leave the knife at home. After all, I told her, which is worse, one 3-inch blade or, and I picked up a pair of scissors, a device with two 7-inch blades? They even came apart in the middle! I kept my promise about being more discreet in the future and did not show my blade outside my office; but I was so pi$$ed about the reprimand (which did not go into my personnel folder), that I carried 5- and 6-inch bladed knives for weeks thereafter. And no one knew that I had them!

    Oh, and I never helped those secretaries again.

    I also was accosted by two large dogs on the way back from work one day. It was a day that I had left my knife at home. The dogs acted in tandem and one would move on me while the other tried to distract me. Having been badly bitten by a dog years before, I knew these dogs meant business. I had a backpack that wasn't much of a weapon, but I determined which dog was the dominant dog and concentrated on him. I nearly lost a chunk of my leg, but I finally chased both of them off. I called Animal Control and reported it and they were already aware of the situation. The dogs had apparently slipped through a hole they'd dug under the fence and had escaped. After that distasteful experience, I began carrying my 6-inch serrated Cold Steel Vaquero to work. This was in another office, but I still carry at least a 5-inch blade when I'm out and about in the neighborhood. I also got one of those Cold Steel Irish walking sticks and frequently carry that.

    Bottom line: You carry according to your needs.

  6. #26
    Join Date
    Sep 2010
    Location
    Memphis
    Posts
    813
    I could do most of my daily activities with my ALOX Farmer. I just choose not to.


    BTW, I carry a firearm daily and beef is for steak and burgers.

    Memphis pork BBQ is the answer to most questions regarding 'what should I eat?'



  7. #27
    Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Location
    The....Village
    Posts
    6,993
    Quote Originally Posted by fatcat55 View Post
    Hey! I have to have a valid reason to keep buying blades!
    There needs to be a valid reason?
    "E nânâ `ia ka pulapula i ka la`a kea i ka la`a uli"


  8. #28
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Posts
    1,457
    Not only can my little Case Mini Copper lock handle 100% of my EDC knife needs, but it has recently been fired from 50% of those tasks, since I've now started opening packages with a box cutter (got tired of gumming up the edge with packing tape).
    "You are the best sharpener. Without the skill the tools mean nothing. Now you must pick the sharpening tools that will aid you." – knifenut1013
    "Can you imagine how dull Dual Survival would be with Ray [Mears] and Cody being all sensible and agreeing on everything?" – pitdog

  9. #29
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Central Alberta, Canada.
    Posts
    3,724

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    Quote Originally Posted by fatcat55 View Post
    After a year or so of EDC I have to admit that my LM Squirt PS4 can handle 90% of my daily knife/tool needs... I work in an office environment and do carry a separate folder, but I have to admit the blade on my squirt could handle pretty much anything I need in my normal daily routine.

    Part of me is happy to know that but part of me wants to be able to say I've yet to find that "one" knife/tool that will do it all in most every situation or location.

    So, I just tell myself I need something more than the Squirt just in case of a grizzly bear attack... in my office...in a city of 100K...in East Texas!

    Hey! I have to have a valid reason to keep buying blades!

    If your Leatherman does what you need and you are happy with it, be content with what you have and don't worry about "keeping up with the jonses" (this year I sold off most of my collection and now EDC a $10 boxcutter).

    If you have an insatiable curiosity for what the knife industry has to offer (like I did) I suggest familiarising yourself with the exchange forums, selling off dozens of knives at the same time can be a lot of work.

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