- Joined
- May 21, 2011
- Messages
- 3,132
Hi all,
I guess sometimes, I have to this weird stuff from time to time. Like today. There's a perfect cooking set in the kitchen. Plenty of food in the fridge.
Then this guy looks out back and thinks: "Hmm, what about scrambled eggs with some saucages on a wooden fire. Why not prep it all with the Swabbie?"...
The rest is history.
Everything's there...

Gotta cut up the saucages first before I get the blade dirty. The Swabbie is not the best free-handing-saucage-cutting tool out there, by the way. But it cuts, so it works.


No need to start chopping down trees or anything. Plenty of firewood stacked for the winter.

Like a charm.

3 different sizes for the wood, seems about right.

The Swabbie makes some great curls by the way. Little ones...

...as well as larger ones. It's the backward swept curve, maybe? For some reason the Swabbie does this REALLY well. I've needed a lot more practice with some other blades, to be honest.

Some shavings from this piece of fatwood go into the mix.

Not a problem...

Not gonna wait for all of it to turn into coal. I was hungry. Saucages first.

Eggs second. The well trained eye might spot a Swabbie too :thumbup:

Bon appétit!

Nothing groundbreaking in this thread, but I did have a lot of fun. The Swabbie is one of those blades that I don't use too often, but every time I get it out of its sheath I'm happy as a little child, and a massive grin appears on my face. I'm still trying to convince myself to mod it one day too, but that won't be for anytime soon.
Cheers
I guess sometimes, I have to this weird stuff from time to time. Like today. There's a perfect cooking set in the kitchen. Plenty of food in the fridge.
Then this guy looks out back and thinks: "Hmm, what about scrambled eggs with some saucages on a wooden fire. Why not prep it all with the Swabbie?"...
The rest is history.
Everything's there...

Gotta cut up the saucages first before I get the blade dirty. The Swabbie is not the best free-handing-saucage-cutting tool out there, by the way. But it cuts, so it works.


No need to start chopping down trees or anything. Plenty of firewood stacked for the winter.

Like a charm.

3 different sizes for the wood, seems about right.

The Swabbie makes some great curls by the way. Little ones...

...as well as larger ones. It's the backward swept curve, maybe? For some reason the Swabbie does this REALLY well. I've needed a lot more practice with some other blades, to be honest.

Some shavings from this piece of fatwood go into the mix.

Not a problem...

Not gonna wait for all of it to turn into coal. I was hungry. Saucages first.

Eggs second. The well trained eye might spot a Swabbie too :thumbup:


Bon appétit!

Nothing groundbreaking in this thread, but I did have a lot of fun. The Swabbie is one of those blades that I don't use too often, but every time I get it out of its sheath I'm happy as a little child, and a massive grin appears on my face. I'm still trying to convince myself to mod it one day too, but that won't be for anytime soon.
Cheers
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