Sure, swords and guns are cool, but what about a trusty axe? what axe would be best for survival innawoods and against other people?
>>34809679
thinking about this one
https://www.amazon.ca/Gerber-Grylls-Survival-Hatchet-31-002070/dp/B00B0I2DBK/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1502301502&sr=8-3&keywords=survival+axe
A machete.
Now go home.
>>34809679
If you could only have one tool? A heavier tomahawk. You can take smaller trees, split, and take the handle off for skinning and feather sticks.
>>34809704
the single most useless tool to have inawoods.
>>34809849
That depends on the woods, as well as what style of machete is used.
>>34809704
the single most useless tool to have inawoods.
>>34809867
hmm i live in north america with hardwood trees. Give me a situation in which a machete is the tool of choice for anything. Not homesteading that's for damn sure, cant use the backside as a hammer, cant split logs, cant replace the handle if broken. Useless meme tool.
http://www.homedepot.com/p/Estwing-26-in-Camper-s-Nylon-Vinyl-Grip-Handle-Axe-E45A/100351735
>>34809984
woodman's pal. I live in Arizona and bought because I decided why not it was twenty bucks if highs school me breaks it oh well I'm out twenty bucks. I've split logs with it, I've cut down mesquite trees with it and if the scales break they're easy to fix.
>>34810004
I own this axe, and I can vouch for it,
I've built more half shelters, leantoos, and A frames than I care to count with essentially this thing, and some paracord, for the last three years.
Maintain it, and it'll last you a lifetime
>>34809734
Yep. Love me a knife but if I'm innawoods a tomahawk just better. For damn near every application.