Spyderco River Knife?
Spyderco River Knife?
Hi all, with a renewed interest in paddling and having swamped my canoe a couple times since restarting, I’m interested in a small fixed blade sheath knife to use on my PFD. First time I swamped I had my Z-wear Shaman in my pocket, iPhone, .380, wallet, and my key fob too I sure am glad I didn’t lose or destroy anything! But it reminded me to use my dry bag and little pelican case.
Looking at the available “river knives” out there has so far been… disappointing. Nothing I’ve seen looks more useful than my SE Salt 2, which I’ve been carrying since that first dunking.
So for the brain trust here, what would you like to see in a new purpose-designed Spyderco river knife? Would you want a small fixed blade or a folder, and would you wear it on your PFD or keep in inside a pocket somewhere?
Hawkbill?
Blunt tip?
Sheep’s foot / modified wharnie?
Definitely H1 or LC200N, although maybe everything should be MagnaCut
Skeletonized handle, or G10 or FRN scales?
Or would you be happy with something like the ARK or Swick?
On my little poll, please indicate your interest Y/N/M, one steel you want, and the edge treatment. Discuss!
Looking at the available “river knives” out there has so far been… disappointing. Nothing I’ve seen looks more useful than my SE Salt 2, which I’ve been carrying since that first dunking.
So for the brain trust here, what would you like to see in a new purpose-designed Spyderco river knife? Would you want a small fixed blade or a folder, and would you wear it on your PFD or keep in inside a pocket somewhere?
Hawkbill?
Blunt tip?
Sheep’s foot / modified wharnie?
Definitely H1 or LC200N, although maybe everything should be MagnaCut
Skeletonized handle, or G10 or FRN scales?
Or would you be happy with something like the ARK or Swick?
On my little poll, please indicate your interest Y/N/M, one steel you want, and the edge treatment. Discuss!
- Chopping Broccoli
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Re: Spyderco River Knife?
The yellow handled serrated edge Pacific Salt is all I need for a river knife. Hard to beat this one.
Re: Spyderco River Knife?
Did you check out the Fish Hunter?
Spydergirl88
3 Nats, 1 Chap, 1 Sham, 1 Urb
3 Nats, 1 Chap, 1 Sham, 1 Urb
Re: Spyderco River Knife?
se sheepsfoot caribbean.
if i was worried about losing it, i might opt for a se atlantic salt. personally, i prefer the pacific salt, but if you need to use it for emergencies and don't need a tip, the atlantic salt is safer. there's also the assist, which would be even safer and give you a more hand-filling grip.
the new enuff that's coming out with a longer and thinner blade might be a good choice too, if you're looking for a fixed blade. unfortunately, that one hasn't even made it to a reveal yet, so there's no telling how long down the road it might be.
if i was worried about losing it, i might opt for a se atlantic salt. personally, i prefer the pacific salt, but if you need to use it for emergencies and don't need a tip, the atlantic salt is safer. there's also the assist, which would be even safer and give you a more hand-filling grip.
the new enuff that's coming out with a longer and thinner blade might be a good choice too, if you're looking for a fixed blade. unfortunately, that one hasn't even made it to a reveal yet, so there's no telling how long down the road it might be.
keep your knife sharp and your focus sharper.
current collection:
C36MCW2, C258YL, C253GBBK, C258GFBL, C101GBBK2, C11GYW, C11FWNB20CV, C101GBN15V2, C101GODFDE2, C60GGY, C149G, C189, C101GBN2, MT35, C211TI, C242CF, C217GSSF, C101BN2, C85G2, C91BBK, C142G, C122GBBK, LBK, LYL3HB, C193, C28YL2, C11ZPGYD, C41YL5, C252G, C130G, PLKIT1
spyderco steels:
H2, CPM 20CV, CPM 15V, CTS 204P, CPM CRUWEAR, CPM S30V, N690Co, M390, CPM MagnaCut, LC200N, CTS XHP, H1, 8Cr13MoV, GIN-1, CTS BD1, VG-10, VG-10/Damascus, 440C
current collection:
C36MCW2, C258YL, C253GBBK, C258GFBL, C101GBBK2, C11GYW, C11FWNB20CV, C101GBN15V2, C101GODFDE2, C60GGY, C149G, C189, C101GBN2, MT35, C211TI, C242CF, C217GSSF, C101BN2, C85G2, C91BBK, C142G, C122GBBK, LBK, LYL3HB, C193, C28YL2, C11ZPGYD, C41YL5, C252G, C130G, PLKIT1
spyderco steels:
H2, CPM 20CV, CPM 15V, CTS 204P, CPM CRUWEAR, CPM S30V, N690Co, M390, CPM MagnaCut, LC200N, CTS XHP, H1, 8Cr13MoV, GIN-1, CTS BD1, VG-10, VG-10/Damascus, 440C
Re: Spyderco River Knife?
Serrated Swick.
Last edited by skeeg11 on Tue Aug 24, 2021 10:53 am, edited 1 time in total.
- JonLeBlanc
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Re: Spyderco River Knife?
I would second that recommendation, I think that would make a very logical choice for a canoeing knife.
My collection so far: 52100 Military (2); 52100 PM2 (2); 52100 Para3; Stretch2 V-Toku; KnifeWorks M4 PM2; BentoBox M390 PM2; BentoBox S90V Military; Police4 K390; S110V PM2; SS Delica AUS-6; Wayne Goddard Sprint VG-10
Wish list: Hundred Pacer; Sliverax; Mantra; 52100 PM2 SE; Kapara
Wish list: Hundred Pacer; Sliverax; Mantra; 52100 PM2 SE; Kapara
- VooDooChild
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Re: Spyderco River Knife?
Why not use an enuff salt?
Also the more than enuff will be a salt when it comes out.
Also the more than enuff will be a salt when it comes out.
"Rome's greatest contribution to mathematics was the killing of Archimedes."
- bearfacedkiller
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Re: Spyderco River Knife?
Seems like the Enuff Salt is made for this.
-Darby
sal wrote:Knife afi's are pretty far out, steel junky's more so, but "edge junky's" are just nuts. :p
SpyderEdgeForever wrote: Also, do you think a kangaroo would eat a bowl of spagetti with sauce if someone offered it to them?
Re: Spyderco River Knife?
Enuff said.
- Cricket Bite
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Re: Spyderco River Knife?
I believe Sal said he was working on a larger version of the Enuff. I am hoping for a bit thinner stock as well. Sounds like a winner. Hopefully LC200N.
Re: Spyderco River Knife?
So far the model announced is H1.Cricket Bite wrote: ↑Tue Aug 24, 2021 7:21 amI believe Sal said he was working on a larger version of the Enuff. I am hoping for a bit thinner stock as well. Sounds like a winner. Hopefully LC200N.
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Re: Spyderco River Knife?
This might be obvious to some, but I'm not sure if the actual tasks of a river knife is implied by the name / category?
When I go canoeing, it's typically on a mix of small rivers and lakes, and knife tasks along the way is anything from food prep, camp prep, fishing etc.
I find that a folding salt knife is most practical and safe to use while in the canoe, i.e. the knife I attach to my PFD, while once on shore I will typically use my Waterway for more demanding camp tasks.
Exactly which of my Salt folding knives I bring with me varies a bit, but if I were to only have one, I would probably go with the Salt 2 FFG.
When I go canoeing, it's typically on a mix of small rivers and lakes, and knife tasks along the way is anything from food prep, camp prep, fishing etc.
I find that a folding salt knife is most practical and safe to use while in the canoe, i.e. the knife I attach to my PFD, while once on shore I will typically use my Waterway for more demanding camp tasks.
Exactly which of my Salt folding knives I bring with me varies a bit, but if I were to only have one, I would probably go with the Salt 2 FFG.
Re: Spyderco River Knife?
Any excuse for another knife in H1 is cool with me!
Re: Spyderco River Knife?
I think it’s too big, especially to be on a PFD. But I’m only going on specs and pics, I’ve never seen one in person.
The camp/kitchen/utility knife is packed away in this case, and quite honestly will be a Mora. If I were fishing I’d have a fillet knife along. I’m after that thing you’d have on your person to deal with tangling with trot lines, trash fishing line, and other unexpected (but planned for) things that present hazard.aicolainen wrote: ↑Tue Aug 24, 2021 8:23 amThis might be obvious to some, but I'm not sure if the actual tasks of a river knife is implied by the name / category?
When I go canoeing, it's typically on a mix of small rivers and lakes, and knife tasks along the way is anything from food prep, camp prep, fishing etc.
I find that a folding salt knife is most practical and safe to use while in the canoe, i.e. the knife I attach to my PFD, while once on shore I will typically use my Waterway for more demanding camp tasks.
Exactly which of my Salt folding knives I bring with me varies a bit, but if I were to only have one, I would probably go with the Salt 2 FFG.
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Re: Spyderco River Knife?
I am a swiftwater rescue instructor and mandate in my classes that each student have a fixed blade attached to their PFD somewhere with a lanyard from the knife to a secondary attachment point.
When I am doing whitewater paddling seminars and classes, I make the same recommendation. Many in the paddling community don't understand the proper use of throw bags and rope use around water and some have a tendency to "clip" the end of a throw bag or rope to their PFD with a carabiner when being rescued or doing the rescue. It can turn a patient or a rescuer into a deep-diving crankbait. I tell my students - "Don't be the crankbait!".
The knife is there for immediate access not only for self-rescue and/or extrication from an unknown hazard such as line in the water, but also for cutting a rescue line if needed.
A secondary folder for more measured and precise cuts needed on a float trip can be accomplished with a "salt" folder of some type, preferably one with an SE.
When I am doing whitewater paddling seminars and classes, I make the same recommendation. Many in the paddling community don't understand the proper use of throw bags and rope use around water and some have a tendency to "clip" the end of a throw bag or rope to their PFD with a carabiner when being rescued or doing the rescue. It can turn a patient or a rescuer into a deep-diving crankbait. I tell my students - "Don't be the crankbait!".
The knife is there for immediate access not only for self-rescue and/or extrication from an unknown hazard such as line in the water, but also for cutting a rescue line if needed.
A secondary folder for more measured and precise cuts needed on a float trip can be accomplished with a "salt" folder of some type, preferably one with an SE.
Re: Spyderco River Knife?
I'm not opposed to the idea but I have some questions. What exactly does a "purpose designed river knife" entail? What kind of advantages would a "river knife" offer over existing Salt models? I would imagine most models from Spyderco's Salt series could be sufficient as a river knife.
I kayak often and almost always have the Salt 1 with me. Usually I'm fishing and I have yet to need anything more. If I wanted a fixed blade, I would look at the ARK, Swick, or an Enuff Salt.
I've considered buying a Snap-It Salt for clipping on to my PFD, just haven't pulled the trigger yet because the Salt 1 has worked so well for me.
I kayak often and almost always have the Salt 1 with me. Usually I'm fishing and I have yet to need anything more. If I wanted a fixed blade, I would look at the ARK, Swick, or an Enuff Salt.
I've considered buying a Snap-It Salt for clipping on to my PFD, just haven't pulled the trigger yet because the Salt 1 has worked so well for me.
-Nick
Re: Spyderco River Knife?
I know this is very serious business, but I couldn't help but laugh out loud at this.
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Re: Spyderco River Knife?
A purpose driven river knife typically has a serrated or partially serrated edge, blunted tip, and is housed in a sheath that has multiple options for attachment methods. Very similar to a dive knife.
No advantage over a Salt knife in cutting performance whatsoever. The greatest advantage is easy access and rapid deployment for immediate use in an emergency situation. In a water rescue scenario, whether a professional rescuer or a whitewater paddler, things can move very quickly, especially in a live-bait rescue or a rapidly rising flood event.
Introducing ropes into a situation with moving water is adding fuel to a fire. Being able cut someone else or yourself loose from a rope quickly is paramount. Draw and cut will be faster for the average person than draw, flick/open, and cut. Especially if you're wearing a wetsuit/drysuit and water gloves.
No advantage over a Salt knife in cutting performance whatsoever. The greatest advantage is easy access and rapid deployment for immediate use in an emergency situation. In a water rescue scenario, whether a professional rescuer or a whitewater paddler, things can move very quickly, especially in a live-bait rescue or a rapidly rising flood event.
Introducing ropes into a situation with moving water is adding fuel to a fire. Being able cut someone else or yourself loose from a rope quickly is paramount. Draw and cut will be faster for the average person than draw, flick/open, and cut. Especially if you're wearing a wetsuit/drysuit and water gloves.
- kennethsime
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Re: Spyderco River Knife?
Isn't the Enuff Salt Sheepsfoot perfect for this already?
https://www.spyderco.com/catalog/details/FB31YL/824
https://www.spyderco.com/catalog/details/FB31YL/824
I'm happiest with Micarta and Tool Steel.
Top four in rotation: K390 + GCM PM2, ZCarta Shaman, Crucarta PM2, K390 + GCM Straight Spine Stretch.
Top four in rotation: K390 + GCM PM2, ZCarta Shaman, Crucarta PM2, K390 + GCM Straight Spine Stretch.
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