newforest
ArboristSite Operative
Hello, apologies if this is a worn topic around here somewhere. If so, please point me to the right discussion.
I'm shopping for a new hatchet. I don't have a lot of experience with splitting actual firewood with an axe; I have used a Monster Maul all of my life. Nothing can defeat the Monster Maul. But I have been starting to prefer keeping a ready supply of crispy-dry pine or fir around to chop up into kindling when needed. And I can't even describe to most people how super nice it is to run across the remains of exploded Birch trees on job-sites where I can pick up onion sacks full of birch bark a couple times a year and never fool with colored-ink-paper-or-cardboard at all any more.
A friend of mine with woods experience going back to before his teen-age years showed me a way to shop for hatchets, once upon a time when we had 3 to pick from. He suggested that the thickness of the metal behind the edge will ultimately determine how easy it is to sharpen it. And yeah, all 3 varieties of hatchet available in the Big Box store we were in at the time had edges that quickly thickened up dramatically behind the cut edge.
So what small old-time brand, maybe Made-In-The-USA, is not like that?
The only thought I have so far is Est-Wing, perhaps?
Normally I don't like to order things, I like to pick them up in my hands in an actual store. But I'm not optimistic on finding the hatchet I want in a store anywhere, anymore.
I'm shopping for a new hatchet. I don't have a lot of experience with splitting actual firewood with an axe; I have used a Monster Maul all of my life. Nothing can defeat the Monster Maul. But I have been starting to prefer keeping a ready supply of crispy-dry pine or fir around to chop up into kindling when needed. And I can't even describe to most people how super nice it is to run across the remains of exploded Birch trees on job-sites where I can pick up onion sacks full of birch bark a couple times a year and never fool with colored-ink-paper-or-cardboard at all any more.
A friend of mine with woods experience going back to before his teen-age years showed me a way to shop for hatchets, once upon a time when we had 3 to pick from. He suggested that the thickness of the metal behind the edge will ultimately determine how easy it is to sharpen it. And yeah, all 3 varieties of hatchet available in the Big Box store we were in at the time had edges that quickly thickened up dramatically behind the cut edge.
So what small old-time brand, maybe Made-In-The-USA, is not like that?
The only thought I have so far is Est-Wing, perhaps?
Normally I don't like to order things, I like to pick them up in my hands in an actual store. But I'm not optimistic on finding the hatchet I want in a store anywhere, anymore.