Knives are made for cutting and the bowie knife is no exception to that rule. However, when it comes to determining exactly what a bowie knife will cut, it can be rather hard to determine the exact answer. This is, perhaps, due to the fact that different types of knives are good for cutting different sorts of things. Your bowie knife might be ideal for cutting through bone, sinew and muscle. Alternatively, it might be better used to cut through the delicate underbelly of a fish, through the thin skin of a tomato, or through that animal hide that you want to save and use.
Let’s take a look at the question of size. Bowie knives are available in a bewildering range of sizes, from six inches to more than a foot long. Obviously, you won’t want to take a six or seven inch knife out for the task of chopping firewood. That’s better left to a hatchet or an axe. However, if you have one of the longer bowie knives, they can be quite heavy enough to use as a hatchet (if needs be). You’ll find that larger blades are excellent for any task requiring chopping and that bone, wood and even light metal can be cut with consummate ease.
Now, what do these factors have to do with your knife? Why can’t a single bowie knife be used to cut through brush and then used to gut and clean that freshly caught fish? Why can’t you slice a tomato into paper-thin pieces and then use that same knife to cut up kindling for the night’s fire? Well, actually, you can. However, why would you want to? You will find that some bowie knife types are better suited to specific cutting tasks than are others. As an example, a larger bowie knife might be heavy enough and resilient enough to be used as a hatchet, allowing you to clear brush and even chop up small to moderate trees for the night’s fire.
To sum up, bowie knives are capable of cutting through any variety of different materials. You’ll find, however, that what you cut will have a significant effect on the blade’s edge, as well as on the knife’s longevity. The size of the knife is directly related to the materials that you should attempt to cut.
How do you know what your bowie knife can cut? The trick is to buy a knife that is suited to your purpose. Knife blades that run in the middle ground can be used to cut a wider variety of materials, but you’ll find that, while they are good “jacks-of-all-trades,” they’re not good for very specific tasks where a long or short blade should be used. So, the first trick is to buy a bowie knife that fits your needs. This will require that you know what those needs are. Of course, buying more than one knife to fill those needs is always an option, as well.
Dylan Sabot is the owner of an online bowie knives store featuring rubber training knives and butane lighters for camping.
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