What Did You Use Your Sebenza For Today ???

I used my Large Insingo today to cut a ski rope that had been sucked up into the jet of a Sea-Doo. After watching one of the guys with us try use some tanto Kershaw for several minutes, I went in and grabbed my knife. It went through the nylon rope like it was butter. The Insingo saved the day!
 
Used my small Insingo for several yard tasks yesterday. Normally, I would use a proper pruner, but these were just some quick touch-ups. I pruned the young shoots from a few Canadian Chokecherries, trimmed a few dead buds from spiraeas, trimmed back some too low branches on a neighboring Sycamore...I only took a pic of the shoot trimmings...

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Its funny, but I used the Insingo to cut a small slit in the waistband of my swimming trunk. Okay, let me explain - my swimming trunk has a waist band that needs to be hand tightened by pulling it out. At the water park, I realized, of the two bands the end of one had sneaked inside (this happens when the other end is pulled out too much). It was an "oh s***" situation, cause there was no way I could enter water without tightening the waist band. I felt to so relived when I realized I had my Insingo clipped to my trouser -- created a slit in the waist band, and pulled out the other end of the band. :D
 
Opened 2 hay bales, sliced up 5 pounds of pork, 5 pounds of beef, sliced up 10 cloves of garlic paper thin. Whittled a fishing hook for my nephew, sliced my bagel, spread some cream cheese lol...My Sebenza gets used every day like this..I dont use steak knives, or any "kitchen knives" in the kitchen, whats in my pocket is whats getting used, and that most often is my Sebenza.
 
I obused it badly yesterday.
At a soccer tournament, we needed to put two flags in the ground.
It was on grass, but the soil was hardened after a couple weeks of little to no rain.
Well, all efforts of twisting the poles into the ground failed, and in a last effort attempt, I simply drove my Sebenza down in the ground.
Twice, sort of making a cross.
The flags were then easy to put down in the hole, but my Sebenza edge was basically ruined:)

No worries though, it honed up just fine with little steel lost.
The scratch-marks on the knife doesn't excactly add to its beauty, but it sure testifies to it being put to use..
Back in the pocket for regular use today
 
I obused it badly yesterday.
At a soccer tournament, we needed to put two flags in the ground.
It was on grass, but the soil was hardened after a couple weeks of little to no rain.
Well, all efforts of twisting the poles into the ground failed, and in a last effort attempt, I simply drove my Sebenza down in the ground.
Twice, sort of making a cross.
The flags were then easy to put down in the hole, but my Sebenza edge was basically ruined:)

No worries though, it honed up just fine with little steel lost.
The scratch-marks on the knife doesn't excactly add to its beauty, but it sure testifies to it being put to use..
Back in the pocket for regular use today


No pics? You must always take a pic--that's why the cell-phone camera was invented--to take pics of using our Sebenza's.
 
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