Noah's Snark

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I had my lower left leg severed and the Army doctors reattached it. Amazing but ugly work lol. Good luck Brotha. Remember it’s all about the Physical therapy
Mine is no where near that complicated they are taking a couple bones off the bottom of my foot and checking the hardware from the last surgery to see if it is causing problems.
Thank you for your service my friend
 
After 3 years, it's back.
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Just got gas, and it was $48 for a little over a half tank. Sucks.
 
I do 50 miles round trip daily - if i don't have any errands.
Had a 140, kept the 110
It was fine, just the balance seemed off.
The skrama 240 is NICE.
The skrama 200 is pretty good, too. Actually more useful than I expected.
I like it better than the BK7 or Junglas 2.
 
I have read a few places that peeps like the 110 over the 140, and most like the 240 over the 200.
 
I haven't been to the cabin since the middle of January. Sad.
 
Although I've not had the opportunity to use them yet, I feel there's not much I couldn't accomplish with this duo:



Oh a SKarma. I remember going out with my Finnish Grand Dada out checking bunny snares when I was little...mmm barbecued rabbit... He used one to make a fire and such, it was an old one from the olde country and he liked it to keep used to keep it "Tuned". He was a Doctor and knew how to keep his tools in top condition. Guess like you need to use china plates or they go brittle. It took a lot of eating those Member Berries to remember how I was always fascinated by large bladed knives that work in alder brush and black spruce and simular botanical tyrannicals. Traditional Latin Machetes for me on the thicker stuff and wasn't as useful "Grand Dad's" knife. After a while I got in to bigger blades and started using them like how Grand Dad did, amazing how I remembered that it and it call came flooding back to me. Well what he showed me, my bigger blades could do stuff like that as well. I did see and use that Skarma a few times when Grand Dad used it to let me cut poles and sticks and I barely remembered about the small more find ground part of the blade. After that I never saw it again. Seems it got sent to a museum some where back in the Olde Country shortly after that. Yep he also believed in the saw as well. He never let me handle an axe or hatchet, well till he found out all the "Wood Working" I was forced to do else where. But most wood working was delimbing, hauling brush and logs and a lot of work with the maul splitting.
 
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