Went on a day hike to a provincial park (state park to my US buds) in Northern Ontario, after nearly two weeks stuck inside because of a summer flu and work, it was just awesome to be outside again; bolts of sunshine piercing through the tree canopy, few bugs, and perfect humidity; absolutely gorgeous.
One of the purposes of this hike was to show my girlfriend basic bushcraft skills. I'd brought along a couple of Moras as well as my BK7. She was impressed with what the Moras, appearing to be such simple blades, were actually able to do -- I showed her how to make tent pegs and tinder for a fire (push-cuts, batoning etc).
What really surprised her was how versatile the big-bladed Becker was. Her first comment when I brought out that knife was whether we were going "bear-hunting"

. Not only was it able to do everything the Moras were able to, it was able to do a bit of fairly impressive chopping and I made a small rudimentary teepee structure from fallen dead-wood.
Originally going to post a pic of the Becker among the chopped up wood but found this pic with some cool natural lighting that I had taken while on a break from wood gathering. Note the peg stake in the upper part of the picture, it was hammered into the ground with the BK7 pommel. Something the Moras couldn't do...
This is one of the original Camillus versions of the BK7: