Welcome to RVForums.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest RV Community on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, review campgrounds
  • Get the most out of the RV Lifestyle
  • Invite everyone to RVForums.com and let's have fun
  • Commercial/Vendors welcome

Blades, saws, etc.

Welcome to our community

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends and let's have fun
  • Commercial/Vendors welcome
  • Friendliest RV community on the web

TR25

RVF Regular
Joined
Nov 15, 2025
Messages
88
Location
Vagrant
RV Make
Many
RV Model
Many
When I backpacked, I carried a 'sven saw'. It was a folding saw that was really nice, make short work of most tasks.
Later, I still camped outside (tent/hammock), but used a jeep to haul things, but still carried that saw. Then one day, I was way in the middle of nowhere on the side of a mountain, logging type road in a forest and came across a tree leaning across the trail. OK, it was too big to manhandle and I couldn't figure out how to cut it w/the saw w/o pinching the saw stuck. So I had to back up the winding trail I came up.
Lesson learned. So I switched to a medium sized axe and still carried that when I moved to a truck camper, van, bumperpull trailer.

Now that I've gotten older, and not too wiser, I've changed, ditched the axe tho I still have it. I just don't see myself chopping anything that big. I still carry it, but most of the work needing to be done around camp is done with the kabar cutlass. It's softer, high carbon steel so every easy to sharpen. heavy enough to make short work of anything small I need to or want to cut.

And it's not bent, like the kukri some people like. I've cleaned game with this, something that would be harder to do with a kukri type of knife. I've even cleaned a few deer with it. And it's smaller than a machete, thicker too. Curve at the bottom of the handle keeps it firmly in my hand. i wish they had this 50 years ago.

Do you use any such items?
 
I just carry a Dewalt Sawzall with multiple blades. Has com in very handy on more than one occasion.
 
I just carry a Dewalt Sawzall with multiple blades. Has com in very handy on more than one occasion.
One would be pretty surprised how handy a sawzall has become. I use one for limbing trees and last year, cut down most of a larger tree with one as there are large teeth blades now for that. I had to use a chainsaw for the trunk and bigger limbs, but felling the limbs down first, while in the tree to make the eventual dropping of the main tree easier and safer was done with a corded sawzall and me in the tree.

There's an excercize that involves solving a problem using a piece of string, a hammer and a nail. Long ago, so forgot what it was, but to solve it, you needed all of them...but don't use the hammer as a hammer and the nail as a nail. It was to show you to think what they now call "outside the box". Just because something is mainly used for something, it doesn't mean it can't be used for something else. Was an eye opener for me. "functional fixation" I think was what it was called.
 
It was to show you to think what they now call "outside the box". Just because something is mainly used for something, it doesn't mean it can't be used for something else. Was an eye opener for me. "functional fixation" I think was what it was called.

That's why it is said that true innovation comes from the fringe.
 
Oh, and I carry a bow saw, does everything I need.
 

Latest posts

Latest resources

Back
Top Bottom