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	<description>Pocket Knife Care Made Simple</description>
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		<title>Choice of hunting knife</title>
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				<category><![CDATA[Pocket Knife]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gerber Bowie Knife]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gerber Knives]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Knife]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Knife Pocket Knife]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Videos Clip]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[before settling in this new hunting knife, there are some things you should consider' That animals that hunt? How will you dress and butcher the animal? Got a show? How to hold the knife and the size or weight is a factor? That this does not seem important at first, but going into the wood with a k...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>before settling in this new hunting knife, there are some things you should consider&#8217; That animals that hunt? How will you dress and butcher the animal? Got a show? How to hold the knife and the size or weight is a factor? That this does not seem important at first, but going into the wood with a knife elk unsuitable for peeling, stoning and CAPing or suddenly became apparent&#8217;</p>
<p>Mountain small game and birds are often easy to handle, with half navaja&#8217; There are, however, knives specially designed for small game&#8217; Big game such as deer, elk, bear, moose and caribou are just that &#8221;&#8217; Great game&#8217; As the size and weight of the animal increases, the hardness of the skin increases&#8217; Body size and weight is a problem if you have to reverse engineer or quarter animals at home or at a meat processing&#8217; The knife used in quail or rabbit could do the work ourselves, but it will not be easy or pleasant&#8217; Neither rabbit dressing field with a large fixed blade knife sheath&#8217;</p>
<p>Let&#8217;s look at the basic tasks we ask our knives</p>
<p>We stay with the big game&#8217; After death, the first consideration should probably dressing or evisceration&#8217; Any experienced hunter knows that, right? But there&#8217;s a guy who is a gutting knife better than others? Unable to clear a buck or a boost with the same knife used to skin? Of course, but &#8221;&#8217;</p>
<p>Consider that on gut hook, a knife or with a hook in the gut, a clear, clean field work as a skinning knife, dress like a knife to peel the skin of elk will be easier and more effective than could never boning knife&#8217; Speaking of bones &#8221;&#8217; Try a gut hook sometimes&#8217; And if you come from elk, which is his time &#8220;Trophy of Life&#8221;? Want a show, right? At least a head or a shoulder mount, eh? This means that someone must place their impulses taxidermist to have to work with a little more broken away from the holes and notches&#8217; CAPing a knife is in order&#8217;</p>
<p>The important point here is that there are different types of knives for different tasks&#8217; The right tool for the job, as the saying goes&#8217;</p>
<p>Now we will compare the types mentioned so far</p>
<p>Dedicated gut hook</p>
<p>This knife (for our purposes, we ask for a knife) really has only one objective &#8221;&#8217; to open the womb, or Pansa, not cut in the belly and a big, stinking, polluting mess&#8217; The carpet does not point the name of the gut to reverse &#8220;U&#8221; zipper edge open the belly, soft as a whistle! A bit of luxury as a letter opener&#8217; This is not good for anything, but I suppose that could happen as a pencil in a pinch&#8217;</p>
<p>Knives with brackets in the digestive tract</p>
<p>This is a knife, almost any style sheet, but with the gut hook built right in&#8217; dual, two in one, if desired&#8217; (We&#8217;ll talk about different styles of blade down the page&#8217;)</p>
<p>Skinning knives</p>
<p>Skinning knives have a rounded blade and is not the end&#8217; The rounded tip to facilitate cutting of the membrane that holds the skin&#8217; You can use it in a kind or &#8220;drag&#8221; or &#8220;rocking&#8221; motion, as opposed to &#8220;cut&#8221;&#8216; The blunt tip helps to prevent punctures in the skin and the flesh as you progress&#8217; As a knife, there are variations and adaptations, but Skinner is almost always a rounded, blunt end appearance&#8217;</p>
<p>Boning knives</p>
<p>It is often perceived as a &#8220;butcher knife&#8221; or a &#8220;boning knife&#8217;&#8221; This type of knife is ideal for cutting meat from bones&#8217; Blade facilitate relatively close, clean cuts so as not to lose the meat&#8217; At the risk of offending, or the wrath of the purists, that is, in all honesty, you can probably do without&#8217; There are many general, all around hunting knife that you can reverse engineer a large animal&#8217; Moreover, a boning knife could serve as a good general all around hunting knife&#8217;</p>
<p>CAPing knives</p>
<p>CAPing involves fine and detailed review of its trophy antlers, eyes, ears, nose and mouth&#8217; A good knife CAPing usually a thin, thin &#8221;&#8217; but not too soft &#8221;&#8217; blade and a relatively small, a few ergonomic handle&#8217; Control and discretion are essential to CAPing with a knife&#8217; Some leaves have made a knife CAPing rounding&#8217; Some bear the round end to end&#8217; It is more a matter of preference than anything else&#8217; While versions of the round make sure you do not drive a hole in the not, the versions may be more stringent in places to make cuts more difficult&#8217; Remember &#8221;&#8217; control and discretion&#8217; Either party hole will be corrected by the taxidermist (probably at an additional cost to you) and &#8220;missing&#8221; are not easy to hide low-cost or replaced&#8217;</p>
<p>A good overall cap on all trophy hunting knife, but keep in mind the old adage about the tool for the job&#8217; You do not want to use a sledgehammer to drive finishing nails&#8217;</p>
<p>Blade styles</p>
<p>As far as hunting knives go, there are three basic styles drop point blade, clip point and skinning&#8217;</p>
<p>The fall is an excellent point of light for large game&#8217; The blade is generally thicker and heavier, so it&#8217;s a solid, sturdy knife capable of splitting the sternum, ribs and all, but most important, the most difficult big game&#8217; The gradual shift of the curve at the point can make full use of the whole length, instead of the first order of an inch or point&#8217; The fall is an excellent choice for hunting&#8217;</p>
<p>Clip point blades are a bit thinner than the points and the point is emphasized&#8217; It is also a little more edge to the flat back and made an excellent hunting knife for later&#8217; Most hunters agree that if you have a hunting knife, the clip is not as good as the point of collapse&#8217; It is the work, but not as effectively in a variety of situations&#8217;</p>
<p>Many skinning knives are very similar in design of the drop zone&#8217; However, the &#8220;typical&#8221;, &#8220;modern&#8221; skinners do not have the curve associated with the progressive drop zone&#8217; Skinner curve is more dramatic, more than half in the handle, and the curve tend to have a greater radius of the drop zone&#8217; Skinner is a good camp, a good knife&#8217; Is better than the other two slices&#8217; Some very old designs Skinner, rather than the production of hunting knives today, almost a crescent-shaped, and often much more pale&#8217; Are still used in commercial transactions, but not much &#8220;practice&#8221; throughout the game field or forest&#8217;</p>
<p>Fixed or flexible?</p>
<p>Fixed blade knives generally have no moving parts&#8217; That said, there are some with interchangeable blades, and even some that have two blades, a projection from each end of the stick &#8221;&#8217; one sheet at a time, drag the handle again&#8217; For our purposes, a fixed blade knives&#8217;</p>
<p>Fixed blades require a sheath to protect the technology and the hunter&#8217; Are obviously more than the record of the same sheet size, so it is very compact for storage or transport&#8217; All but the smallest / minor, by necessity, be in the belt or in a package&#8217; Fixed blades are very strong, easier to keep clean and tend to last long&#8217;</p>
<p>Knives do what its name says&#8217; The attenuation of the double loop for not using them, but not for themselves&#8217; Safety first, folks&#8217; Files are more compact&#8217; All large, but they go in your pocket, hunting, but most cases are books with a belt&#8217; Any knife used for big game should be a mechanism to lock the blade open&#8217; Records are not as strong or long-term, fixed as the leaves&#8217; Pivots finally conduct and sometimes not a locking mechanism&#8217; They are also a bit harder to keep clean&#8217; Debris, blood, sand, dirt, pet hair, etc, always finds its way into your storage Créneaux time, pivots, and even below the lock&#8217; Not a major problem and not very difficult to clean, something to consider&#8217;</p>
<p>Abstract</p>
<p>There is a knife for every task you&#8217;ll encounter in the game&#8217; Each task can ask the right knife&#8217; Does this mean you have to do three, four, five knives every time you leave camp? Of course not&#8217; With a well designed, well made knife, maybe two, you can perform these tasks&#8217; The options are there, you know what they are&#8217; Now just make your choice based on what you know and you can spend&#8217;</p>
<p>Good luck hunting!</p>

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