A couple of weeks in the past, I broke out my sharpener and bought my Buck knife prepared for an additional lengthy season. That is an annual ritual, and every year I take a second to admire the damage and tear the blade and deal with had seen. Every little blemish tells its personal story, and for this knife, it holds each story of my searching profession.
I acquired this knife after I started searching which, right here in Pennsylvania, kicked off after I was 12 years previous. Again then, the knife was new, shiny, and sharper than I may ever get it to be now. However extra essential than the aesthetics of the knife was its potential. I had no thought what it could assist me accomplish within the subsequent 17 searching seasons.
I do know that giant, fastened blade knives like this one usually are not stylish within the searching world. Everybody appears to be shifting to smaller blades with fancier steels or ultra-light and ultra-sharp replaceable-blade knives. However the reality is, you don’t want an costly precision instrument to intestine a deer. For me, it’s much more significant to make use of a knife that has so many good reminiscences scratched into than a brand new high-end blade.
And that, amongst a number of different causes, is why I consider the Buck knife will dwell endlessly.
The Historical past of the Buck Knife
In 1902 Hoyt Buck, a 13-year-old blacksmith’s apprentice in Kansas, was experimenting with methods to mood metal so it could preserve an edge for longer. He was, in fact, profitable in his experiment, though the Buck knife didn’t present up out there for years after Buck’s discovery.
In 1947, Hoyt and his son Alfred arrange a store known as H.H. Buck & Son behind their residence. The daddy and son duo continued to make high-quality handcrafted knives and their enterprise took off. In truth, Hoyt Buck made roughly 25 knives by hand every week till his loss of life in 1949.
Alfred Buck then took over the place his father left off. Within the early 50s, he expanded promoting of Buck knives to mail order catalogs. In 1961, Buck was integrated and in 1964, the corporate launched the Mannequin 110 Folding Hunter knife, which turned some of the widespread knives ever made. In 1992, Buck debuted the Nighthawk, a fixed-blade knife that was 6.5 inches and had a black deal with made from Zytel for an ergonomic grip. This knife was submitted to the U.S. Navy for analysis to be used by Navy Seals.
With over 100 years of blacksmithing and knife work underneath the Buck title’s belt, it’s no marvel why they’re nonetheless some of the widespread knife producers to this present day.
Conventional Buck Knife Specs and Options
Whereas my Buck knife isn’t the unique Mannequin 110 Folding Hunter, it nonetheless carries a conventional really feel to it. My Buck 119 Particular fastened blade knife has some high quality elements, and admittedly does go away some room for enhancements too.
The 6-inch blade is comprised of 420HC metal and is clipped right into a phenolic deal with. In whole, the knife weighs 7.5 ounces. It’s heavy, cumbersome, and never all the time straightforward to maneuver, but it surely positive does work. It’s nice for that first lower whereas discipline dressing a deer as a result of the tip curves, permitting my hand to drop down decrease than the tip to keep away from puncturing the abdomen or different intestines throughout the course of.
The place it appears to fall brief compared to newer, fancier knives are the close-quarters work above the diaphragm when eradicating the center and lungs. The big blade is commonly troublesome to twist and switch within the tight area, main to some unintentional knicks to my fingers infrequently.
Once I in contrast it with a brand new Montana Knife Firm Whitetail knife, I used to be in a position to see simply how rather more handy it’s to have a smaller, 4” blade for maneuverability within the physique cavity. I’ll be doing a full side-by-side comparability between the 2 knives within the coming weeks, so extra on that later.
The Blade I’ve Shared Each Hunt With
I’m undecided if it’s as a result of I’m getting older or what, however recalling the entire reminiscences this knife and I’ve shared actually hit residence this 12 months. We’ve come a good distance collectively This knife has been there for the entire “firsts” in my searching profession: My first deer, first buck, first turkey, and even my first bear. It’s been on out-of-state hunts, out-of-country hunts, and even bought misplaced within the prairie of South Dakota for a day or two after it gutted my first mule deer.
Typically it’s so uninteresting from operating into bone that it couldn’t lower a bit of paper, whereas different occasions, I’ve stored the sting so eager it’s like operating a knife by way of butter. It hasn’t lived a glamorous life, but it surely’s been there for every of the moments I really dwell for.
After chatting with OL’s govt gear editor Scott Einsmann and realizing that many hunters don’t have the identical knife they began with, I known as my Dad to inform him we would simply be a tad bizarre. You see, I can’t declare that I’m the one who began this “similar knife endlessly” pattern. My Dad has been operating the identical gutting knife in his deer searching pack for over 43 years.
After operating my Buck knife by way of the WorkSharp a number of occasions, I felt the sting to ensure it was prepared for an additional 12 months being lugged across the deer woods with me. There are, admittedly, a number of burrs that I would like to handle if I need it to be excellent, but it surely’s ok for me. The knife might not be excellent, but it surely’s excellent for me.
I packed it away in its black sheath and tucked it into my searching pack, hoping it could see the sunshine of day in a number of brief weeks. As luck would have it, opening week was fairly profitable, and the knife gutted a doe for me, and a primary archery buck for a detailed pal. After a fast rinse and one other few rounds within the WorkSharp, it’s proper again the place it belongs, in my pack, prepared for our subsequent journey.