Knife stories

Joined
Jul 21, 2010
Messages
69
Every good knife has a good story. Whether its the knife you've carried for as long as you could remember (for me, a little knife/saw combo Guidesman folder from Menards), the knife with which you sliced your hand open the day after you got it (Becker BK2: 8 total stitches!), your first hunting knife (Ka-Bar Little Finn), the one with the most interesting story, (either the ancient, yet awesome, Normark fillet knife I found on the side of the highway, or when I accidentally shot my guidesman with a .22LR and it survived), or just your favorite EDC ($35 CRKT M16-13z folder), what is your favorite knife, or numerous knives, and what story is there behind them?
 
Necro thread, but it never got any replies. Mine is when my waved Endura went through a wash and dry cycle after I drunkenly forgot it in my pocket.
 
It’s been a while since a similar thread popped up.

Here’s two brief stories:



The 110 just celebrated its 40th birthday. My father gave it to me right before he took me deer hunting for the first time. It’s been carried and used a bunch. It’s wearing my very first KME edge which isn’t perfect, though it is quite good (and sharp AF!).

The little knife is the one my father EDC’d when I was a kid. Every day he’d come home and dump it onto the bathroom counter along with a pocket full of change. Every morning it would go back into his pocket. I don’t know how the tip got broken, but he reground it and kept right on using it. He was a tradesman of sorts, and his stuff got worked hard!
 
It’s been a while since a similar thread popped up.

Here’s two brief stories:



The 110 just celebrated its 40th birthday. My father gave it to me right before he took me deer hunting for the first time. It’s been carried and used a bunch. It’s wearing my very first KME edge which isn’t perfect, though it is quite good (and sharp AF!).

The little knife is the one my father EDC’d when I was a kid. Every day he’d come home and dump it onto the bathroom counter along with a pocket full of change. Every morning it would go back into his pocket. I don’t know how the tip got broken, but he reground it and kept right on using it. He was a tradesman of sorts, and his stuff got worked hard!
I like that little one, do both blades lock or just the main?
 
Buck 301 stockman

Several years ago, I cut a seatbelt in a car submerged in the Pit River removed a woman’s lifeless body from the car and then revived her by using CPR.
I have the China Buck version of the 301, just need to get the American version. Glad she's ok! Good job
 
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