street soldier wrote:Nah, I understand its probably not the best for food prep. And quite honestly, as much as I like to think about using them, 90% of the time I use kitchen knives for processing food.
I'm just looking for feedback on ways that people have used their HB in ways that may not be apparent or commonplace. Food prep is just one example. I've seen pics of you using your Tasman for processing fish. How did it work? Better than a straight blade? Worse?
Just trying to think out of the box before I get it in my hand.
Thanks.
John
Gotcha. Well, I can tell you this about mine. I originally bought the tasman kind of as a novelty. I really didn't have anything in mind that I needed a HB for and didn't really see myself using it much. Once I got the thing and started carrying it though, I was surprised how often I found myself reaching for it over a regular blade. I would say on a day to day basis, I can do 80-90% of my edc tasks with a hawkbill, and what's more, I'd say that on at least half of my chores a hawkbill will actually perform BETTER than a regular blade. The problem with the HB is that 10-20% of my chores that the knife just doesn't handle at all. That's why, like JD said, I love the HB as a companion blade but not as a primary. What a HB does well, it does
exceptionally well; and what it does poorly, it does
exceptionally poorly.
As far as specific tasks, I use mine everyday on fish. Gutting, gill removal, scoring heavily scaled fish before removing the filets. I also use mine daily for a plethora of mundane tasks like opening boxes and blister packs, cutting string, rope and fishing line; pretty much anything that you can pull cut is easier with a HB I find. Find an extra pocket and start carrying yours and I'll wager within a week you will have the same kind of epiphany as the rest of us and your tasman will be seeing plenty of use. Enjoy! :)