Texas Hunting Forum

Field dressing

Posted By: senko86

Field dressing - 11/04/13 05:24 AM

Just curious, what is your knife of choice for field dressing/skinning game?
Posted By: dogcatcher

Re: Field dressing - 11/04/13 05:49 AM

Buck skinner, bought it in 1966, haven't used much of anything else since then.
Posted By: senko86

Re: Field dressing - 11/04/13 06:05 AM

I got one for Christmas last year my self and love it... I bought the knives of alaska cub bear thinking it would be good for dressing but it dulled quickly and hard to keep an edge on it... Do you recommend any one in particular for cleaning them out?
Posted By: Red Bone 936

Re: Field dressing - 11/04/13 08:58 AM

Using 6 in. victorinox paring knife for 15 years 5.99 2 or 3 ups and downs on your stone that's it.
Posted By: Sneaky

Re: Field dressing - 11/05/13 01:44 AM

Moore Maker
Posted By: Skitini

Re: Field dressing - 11/05/13 06:37 PM

Been using a 110 for as long as I can remember.
Posted By: jdk1985

Re: Field dressing - 11/05/13 07:28 PM

Havalon Piranta. Scalpel sharp. When it dulls; put a new blade on it.
Posted By: glasshole

Re: Field dressing - 11/06/13 12:59 AM

^^^^^^^^This...awesome
Posted By: senko86

Re: Field dressing - 11/06/13 02:51 AM

I've seen those replaceable blade knives and thought it seemed pretty cool... Just curious, about how long will a blade last?
Posted By: Nightlight

Re: Field dressing - 11/06/13 02:59 AM

Cutco
Posted By: txshntr

Re: Field dressing - 11/06/13 03:08 AM

Originally Posted By: senko86
I've seen those replaceable blade knives and thought it seemed pretty cool... Just curious, about how long will a blade last?
Originally Posted By: jdk1985
Havalon Piranta. Scalpel sharp. When it dulls; put a new blade on it.



These seem to do great. Had a buddy recently buy me one. He uses his for everything and I have been impressed.

Originally Posted By: Nightlight
Cutco


Good knives and easy to sharpen, but mine wouldn't hold an edge very long.
Posted By: Mud Shark

Re: Field dressing - 11/06/13 01:49 PM

Originally Posted By: senko86
I've seen those replaceable blade knives and thought it seemed pretty cool... Just curious, about how long will a blade last?



I've got one and I'm on my second blade in 4 years, and I didn't change it because it got dull. I tried to torque it a little too much and it broke. I use my from skinning deer to fileting duck and dove breast, etc. I'm really happy with my investment.
Posted By: twindad

Re: Field dressing - 11/06/13 04:59 PM

Like the Havalon for skinning, but like the Outdoor Edge Sling Blade for field dressing.
Posted By: stxhunter

Re: Field dressing - 11/08/13 05:48 AM

For field dressing I use something similar to this

Posted By: Gone to Texas

Re: Field dressing - 11/08/13 05:08 PM

Originally Posted By: jdk1985
Havalon Piranta. Scalpel sharp. When it dulls; put a new blade on it.



These look awesome, gonna look into them.
Posted By: crash700

Re: Field dressing - 11/15/13 04:53 AM

Taxidermist scalpel with 3" blades. Cost about $8 for the handle and about $35 for 100 blades. Usually only takes one blade for a deer and maybe two on a hog.
Posted By: Slow Drifter

Re: Field dressing - 11/16/13 01:08 AM

Schrade Old Timer single blade lock back 194OT. Been using the same knife since about 1983. Coupla' buddies of mine have started using inexpensive Dexter/Russell knives and I must say they get the job done.
Posted By: Trust

Re: Field dressing - 11/17/13 02:52 AM

Havalon, but I quarter my deer. If I'm gutting then it's a Katz knife or old Buck 110
Posted By: HuntFish512

Re: Field dressing - 11/18/13 05:07 AM

buck alpha folder / buck 110. Miss my Dads buck 120 he lost it years ago.
Posted By: Don Dial

Re: Field dressing - 11/18/13 12:48 PM

When we used to skin dress and debone 4-8 deer Sunday mornings we used pocket knives, knives of Alaska caping and cleaver. Usually takes one guy sharpening at the same time. Smaller with good point is better
Posted By: Roosters Tackle

Re: Field dressing - 11/20/13 03:59 AM

I love my Sypderco folding knives. They do the job very well and the Japanese steel holds an edge well.
Posted By: Nitro27

Re: Field dressing - 11/20/13 06:44 PM

Originally Posted By: jdk1985
Havalon Piranta. Scalpel sharp. When it dulls; put a new blade on it.

X2
Posted By: ttxsmith04

Re: Field dressing - 11/25/13 02:02 PM

I use the havalon for skinning, outdoor edge swing blade gutting, and a lone wolf fix blade for everything else.
As far as the havalons go I wish the blades were a little thicker and more durable but they do make it nice to just switch blades if you are doing multiple animals at once
Posted By: 7ARanch

Re: Field dressing - 12/08/13 04:03 AM

Just bought the outdoor edge flip n' blaze. I've done a deer and a hog with it. Still Sharp and the gutting blade is the slickist thing you've ever seen for splitting down the middle and out the legs. Truly not a gimmick and well worth the price.
Posted By: cmc

Re: Field dressing - 12/09/13 11:47 PM

If I have to gut I use an Alaskan Blade Trader, without a doubt the best gut hook Ive ever used and it works great for cutting the hide down the legs when skinning. When skinning I only use the Havalon.
Posted By: scalebuster

Re: Field dressing - 12/10/13 12:16 AM

For gutting I use a Gerber Gator. When skining and butchering I use the cheap white handle chef knives from Sams. These chef knives hold an edge great and sharpen quickly.
Posted By: 603Country

Re: Field dressing - 12/10/13 05:49 PM

If I'm just skinning, I'll use an old KaBar or one of my Browning 3 blade folders (one of the blades is a gut hook). I don't field dress deer anymore, at least not specifically 'in the field'. I will sometimes gut them, into a gut bucket, when they are hung head down, and for that there's hardly anything better than the old KaBar with the 7 inch blade. The long blade lets you get to where the guts are suspended if you want to make that cut without getting your hands and sleeves messy.

I guess we all have our routine ways once we've shot and dressed out a bunch of deer. My Dad's routine was to get me to do it, with his knife, and then sharpen his knife. I used to grump about it, but I'd give anything to be able to skin one more deer for him.
Posted By: Dave Scott

Re: Field dressing - 12/10/13 06:04 PM

You have to rip up the legs, etc and a sort of stilleto or ripping blade is great, then you need to gut the thing and peel off the skin. I'd think about two knives- a ripping blade and a skinning blade. If you can only carry one- that buck pathfinder is very good.
Posted By: Navasot

Re: Field dressing - 12/10/13 06:07 PM

Knife
Posted By: Darryl2012

Re: Field dressing - 12/18/13 12:19 AM

Buck 110 Folding Hunter Finger Grooved. Mom bought it for me in 1986. Don't know how many deer it's dressed over the years, 4 so far this year.
Posted By: Sandwich Maker

Re: Field dressing - 12/19/13 02:06 AM

Havalon for the lighter work, Cutco for the heavier. I bought one of the new Lazer Lites by Outdoor Edge. It's like the Havalon, but with larger and heavier blades that are replaceable. My first experience with it was bad. I bought 4 of them, from Cabelas. Gave 2 to brother-in-laws, one for my son-in-law, and kept one. We were all dissappointed in how quick the blade dulled. I contacted Outdoor Edge and David Bloch, the owner, sent me an email and said they got some bad blades on their 1st run. 2 days later, I had a brand new set of blades for all the knives at he door from him. I think this solved the problem. I field dressed a deer today, (just gutted and emptied cavity, no bone) and when I cleaned it up, still shaved.
Posted By: vanguard

Re: Field dressing - 12/23/13 12:26 PM

Originally Posted By: senko86
Just curious, what is your knife of choice for field dressing/skinning game?



a sharp one
Posted By: Cast

Re: Field dressing - 12/23/13 02:29 PM

I chose knives with replaceable blades. Havalon with the big thick 60 A blades and a Gerber gut hook using box cutter blades. The only thing that bugs me is disposing of the stainless 60 A blades. Can't just toss them and expect them to rust, gotta put them in a bottle or something and trash them.

I also have a razor sharp Kabar USMC for the heavy lifting.
Posted By: passthru

Re: Field dressing - 12/24/13 08:59 PM

It just depends on what I grab. I have an old buck 110. Schrade uncle henry. Some swedish fillet thing. A cutco. A S Potts skinner. A Kershaw. A gerber gut hook and a folder.
Posted By: Brother in-law

Re: Field dressing - 12/30/13 03:23 PM

I buy knives looking for the perfect one. This year I got to try a Outdoor Edge Swing Blade and I am impressed. Aus 8 steel was sharp and sharpened easily with a pocket sharpener. The gut hook aspect was nice to.
I went to the store to get my own and ended up getting the Outdoor Edge with the replaceable blade system. It was a lot cheaper than the Havalon and I like the shape of the blades better as they were more traditional and closer to the swing blade style. I cant wait to use it.
Posted By: Cannon

Re: Field dressing - 01/04/14 04:54 AM

Originally Posted By: jdk1985
Havalon Piranta. Scalpel sharp. When it dulls; put a new blade on it.



^^^^This
Posted By: toolman

Re: Field dressing - 01/04/14 06:39 AM

Mora 711 and the smallest knife in my cheapo S&W three knife kit. The Mora is cheap but awesome-only complaint (not really) is that the blade will rust if you even sweat close to it. The steel has a very high carbon content, so I wash mine in the hottest water I can get, dry it, and wipe it down with Crisco or veg. oil before it goes back in the sheath. the sheaths sort of suck as well and are mainly for storage.
Posted By: PhilR

Re: Field dressing - 01/06/14 12:01 AM

Outdoor Edge Swing Blade.
Posted By: Halfadozen

Re: Field dressing - 01/08/14 01:11 AM

Alaskan Outdoor Edge, and a few customs from here on the forum including the Fry boys knives. Also use Pancho's as well.
Posted By: Martin M.

Re: Field dressing - 01/13/14 11:10 PM

I usually use a Benchmade Griptillian (actually a variant of that by Doug Ritter, called the RSK Mk1). It's a fantastic knife: S30V steel, very easy one-hand operation, great size and shape blade for cleaning animals. I also have a couple of Cutco knives that are stupid sharp. They don't mess around. To each his own, though...
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