Not all that kills has a sharp edge. This is an original weapon from a man who served in the SOE in the CBI theater. Stabbing weapons like this are clearly non-utilitarian and serve only one purpose, the silent elimination of enemy combatants. I have other weapons in my overall collection that are without an edge. One of the deadliest is a long needle-like tool that came in a set of awls and hooked tools. It is shown in the photo below. Here are some non-edged weapons in my collection. They are odds and ends that appealed to me. The photo on the left show some traditional Japanese weapons (direct from Japan) usually associated with Ninjitsu, although Samurai could have also employed them. The weighted chain (Kusari) is a definite deterrent even for a swordsman. I have not tried out the darts yet but now the weather is nice I will have to do so. Kusari were sometimes married with a kama, which created a Kusarigama, a sickle with weighted chain to ensnare one's enemy. I suspect I could seriously hurt myself trying to learn how to use one of them. The black talon like knife on the left is not sharp. The maker says it is supposed to duplicate the "Tine" daggers of WW-II. It is a nicely made weapon but clearly is a far cry from the WW-II version. These were crudely made from the tines of a pitchfork with a cord wrapped handle. The pointy weapon on the far right is very nicely made and lethal. Second from the right is a modern weapon with 3-sided blade and a artistically sculpted skull pommel.
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Well, it is Easter and it is common to wish people a happy one. It used to be a popular holiday with parades and marshmallow bunnies and the bright yellow peeps. Little girls would be sporting white gloves, their newest dresses and crinolines while the mother would be showing off a new bonnet. Days prior, the airwaves would be flooded with Easter songs. Today there is little celebration or notice paid except by a few faithful Christians. Locally the annual magic of a sunrise service has been scuttled because of a breakup of the Council of Churches (yeh they could not get along) and people not wanting the discomfort of sitting on a damp foggy hilltop waiting for the sun. I suppose Jesus might have willingly traded places for the hilltop he spent time on. We have lost so much in this country and sadly I don't think we will ever get it back.
I have not done much lately with FS knives. I do have one on hold. Since I had to pay the tax man a huge bundle more money it put a dent in my available funds. The government can never get enough and spends millions of dollars figuring out how to screw us for more taxes. I wouldn't mind so much if the faceless, moral-less government held any similar values as I was raised to uphold. But with power comes corruption and I guess corruption must be expensive. Well expensive for all except the 57% of Americans who pay no taxes, not one penny. This year alone I paid more in taxes than I paid for my vintage 2,400 square foot house. I have paid for that house many times over in taxes: village, town, county, and school. Not including the taxes on my utilities, gasoline, food, etc. So I am trying to think of Easter and what it really means to me at the same time the evil taxman cometh. Might be nice if they would shift it to some other time of year. Every single thing in my life has a tax associated with it. It's ridiculous! I hope you find a way to celebrate Easter in the good Old-Fashioned way. Coloring eggs, egg hunts, chocolate Easter bunnies, sunrise services, Easter Communion, pretty dresses at church and gorge yourself on Jelly Bellies and Peeps. Find some time too to think of Jesus and his message. Thank your minister or priest for what he does. Be kind to one another, at least for one day! Try to relax and find peace. “Never take a knife to a gunfight,” how many times have you heard this sage advice? What is the contemporary wisdom concerning Knife vs Gun? Fact: a bullet, shot from any firearm, bores a tiny hole through the air. Less than a half inch in diameter, that hole may extend in a liner fashion for hundreds or thousands of yards. But, if it has missed you, by even the smallest of margins, it has missed you forever. It will not twist sideways or come flying at you from another direction (excluding a ricochet). Compare the bullet’s flight to a knife’s slash. The keen edge of a good fighting knife is infinitely thin, but seldom does it travel in one nice straight line. A blade driven in as a thrust may suddenly cut sideways, disemboweling its victim. The blade may extend out in a long slash, and failing to reach you, stop in mid-flight to reverse its direction and stab you through the throat or heart. A knife is not a linear weapon in the same way a bullet is. A knife will cut a curving swath a foot wide and several feet long, and then, instantly and unexpectedly return along the same path or a completely different path. If you look real close at a bullet, then look at any knife, and you decide. The skilled knifer will use feints to draw you into his true attack. Try executing a feint with a bullet. Once released, your bullet cannot be redirected or recalled, nor can its impact energy be controlled. A bullet is a mindless killer. In the hands of a skilled practitioner a knife can merely prick or powerfully puncture, it can lightly touch, dismember, or terminate, all at the discretion of the user. Within its circle of engagement, the knife is unexcelled. The uneducated defender may assume that the knifer’s circle of engagement is only a few short feet, but an attacker possessing even moderately skilled footwork can quickly propel himself forward extending his reach to a dozen feet or more. Best bet is to take a gun, and a knife, and know how to use them! Here are two masterpieces by Larry Harley an original Battle Dagger and Battle Bowie.
Shiroi Kage ryu Why the knife? I have had a concealed carry permit for pistol in NY and PA for over 35 years, so why the knife? I have heard this many times and the answer is, because a sword is too hard to carry concealed. Seriously I trained for over 15 years in kenjutsu (Japanese swordsmanship) and used the methods to expand my knife fighting repertoire. There are times when a firearm is unbeatable. There was an old saying in Japan about the time that firearms became popular and swords waned. “From the safety of castles walls the gun excels. Once swords cross it is of no use at all.” We don’t live or fight in castles today but the saying holds true when we are talking about distance. The only place a gun holds the advantage is at a distance. Tests have proven that distance needs to be 15-20 feet or more! What are the possible disadvantages to a firearm? The one most often mentioned is, unlike a gun, a knife never runs out of bullets. But in a private security situation there had better not be that many bullets flying or we encounter some of the other disadvantages of a firearm. Once loosed a bullet cannot be stopped or retracted. It will continue on in basically a straight line until its energy is spent. A knife can be stopped, redirected, and even reversed as needed. I never heard of anyone on the other side of a wall being killed by a misguided knife. Walls, furniture, other people can all be passed through by bullets and an innocent life lost. I have cut myself, at times seriously, but I never had an accidental discharge with a knife which caused unintended injury to anyone else. I have never had a knife ricochet, except off a bone, and no innocent lives were lost because of that either. No collateral damage is acceptable, especially in a sacred space. The degree of damage to an opponent can be more easily controlled by an edged weapon than a firearm. A firearm begins with tremendous energy and retains it for thousands of feet. A knife can take a small bite, or a large one, as the situation demands. If necessary I can easily hit my target with a knife while running at full speed. I cannot hit….. well much of anything when I am running or even walking with a handgun. There are probably more reasons for “Why the knife.” Right now I think I may have at least given you some food for thought. One of the gun magazines used to have an ad that said, "don't you buy no ugly gun". I don't remember which manufacturer it was, but they were referring to the modern all black, plastic and steel pistols of the day. Being a fan of something a little more classy, I could relate. The last three pistols I bought came in those horrid "Uncle Mikes" cordura contraptions they call holsters. Why would anyone spend nearly a thousand dollars on a gun and stick it in a $5 holster? A pretty nice belt holster came with the Ruger Blackhawk but I have learned that my hips have shrunk (or my waist expanded) and belt holsters with a heavy pistol tend to work their way south. The best solution is a shoulder holster. BUT I didn't want to put an old-style revolver in a Miami Vice rig either. When I want something special my solution is always to go to El Paso Saddelry.
On December 22nd I ordered a custom model 1879 shoulder holster with what they call Frontier Floral carving. The carving is all hand cut, not embossed like many modern western holsters. It came about the first week of February and it's another work of art. It's not cheap, it's not off the shelf and it is not kydex or cordura. But it is what a fine handgun deserves. We see the same thing sometimes in knife sheaths. Kydex has its place, but not in all applications. Often a sheath is poorly designed or fitted, made of cheap materials, or just not worthy of the knife itself. For those knifemakers who are not skilled in leather work, there is no shame in that. Find a sheath maker who will do your knifemaking skill justice. I know that personally I am willing to pay extra for a fine sheath and that a knife or sword without a sheath is incomplete. If anyone out there wants to send me photos of your sheath work, you may find them placed on my website. Some ideas of your prices would be helpful too. Here is a photo of two El Paso 1879 shoulder holsters. The one on the right is for my Colt Python. The one on the left is for my Ruger Blackhawk. They are works of art and make carrying a heavy handgun a pleasure. The current price with carving is about $300. I have been side-tracked lately from knife collecting by a desire to fulfill a childhood fantasy. As a child I played a lot of cowboy and indian and US cavalry. Most kids my age had cap-guns and they were mostly revolvers like the old west six-shooters. My pistol of choice was a life size Hubley copy of a Colt revolver. It was made of metal and very realistic. Back then toys were really expensive but well made. They lasted a long time. Maybe it's nostalgia or advancing senility but I wanted to have a modern handgun representative of the Old West. I looked at a bunch of foreign reproductions and decided they did not quite fulfill what I was looking for. So, to make a short story shorter, I bought an American made Ruger BlackHawk in .357 Magnum caliber. We have been going through some terribly cold weather so I have not been out to shoot it yet but here is a photo of it with a modern custom Bowie by a talented maker named Matt Lamey. Sure enough not long after buying the Ruger a friend called and said he had a line on a real Colt "Peacemaker" in 45 Colt. He picked it up for me and called to say he had good news and bad news. He said It was a mint condition pistol in .45 Colt, but it was not a Colt. It was a copy by a company named AWA, American Western Arms. I did some research on the internet and discovered that AWA was sued by Colt for making too close a copy and they went out of business making the "Peace Keeper" (note the name difference). The price was very good (about 1/2 market value) and the pistol is a beauty in the famed Colt .45 cartridge so I bought it too. I can see why Colt sued AWA. The previous owner actually thought it was a genuine Colt.
The Fairbairn Sykes is such a basic, elemental design that there is little one can do to it without taking it into another genre' altogether. Then along came some photos from a man in England. His name is Oliver Campbell and his renditions of the F-S are quite unique. He complimented our website as being the inspiration for his foray into the world of the F-S. I'll admit at first I was...... unsure how I felt about them. But, you know what, I really do like them for their fresh and edgy look.
They are almost an Art Deco version of the stodgy Fairbairn Sykes. Take a look and see what you think. All three of them are already sold. Good thing or I'd be getting in line to buy one of them. A hundred years ago when I was in Art class one of the important lessons was all about texture. These knives are all about texture too. One of these days I must order one from Oliver. I am sure it will be a diversion from the restof my collection. By the way I think the collection is around 400+ knives not counting any Bowies or other exotic and mundane fighting knives, swords, tomahawks, dirks, etc. I know, if I keep this up I will have to start a blog on Bowies. I have threatened to do that before. My search on ebay for "Coffin hilt Bowies" brought up one in a classic style. The Pommel is the half horse-half gator motif that the British cutlery makers used frequently. The seller could not remember the maker, although he swears it is not Pakistani. Bought back around 1968 he said. I am anxious to see the quality when it arrives. The knife and sheath both look promising as fas as workmanship.
You see I bought a book on Amazon titled "James Black and his Coffin Bowie Knives." It is written by Mr. James Batson, a true Bowie afficianado and historian. It is a very nice book and I think I may have to buy some of his other writings. Check it out. It is filled with nice color and B&W photos of rare Bowies. The most lethal duo when it comes to separating me from my money is Ebay and Amazon. But what the hell money is pretty dull when you get right down to it. I figure it is only worth what it can get me. Usually what it "gets me" is in trouble with the wife. Lately I have not had much luck finding new additions in the FS genre that I could afford. what I really mean is knives that I felt were worth the outrageous prices people were asking. You'd think they were scalping tickets at a football game or something. I'll let you know how the Bowie is for quality later in the month after it arrives. I finally am posting a new blog. I bought a used coffin-hilt Bowie on Ebay the other day. MY BAD! I could not resist when this Coffin Hilt Bowie by Bailey Bradshaw came up for auction. A few years back I bought another Bowie by Mr. Bradshaw, but it is as much Tanto as Bowie. The workmanship on both of them in impeccable. They both sport 10 inch blades which is my favorite length for a fighting knife. Can you imagine a 10 inch bladed F-S? No I don't think that would look right either. These two knives are certainly functional but also works of art. I have said before that the Bowie is one of the finest fighting knives ever designed. I think you'll find both of these eye appealing and clearly lethal. Mr. Bradshaw now builds side by side rifles in the British style which exhibit the same artistic qualities. small age crack in the burl wood but it is stable. Note the gold wire inlay in both knives.
The dagger did finally arrive, many days late. Thank God it wasn't my incoming package with original thumb daggers! This package was scanned 8 times in the same post office as coming and going, and coming and going. I'm very tempted to switch all my business to UPS. The nearest location is about 15 miles from my home.
The dagger was not really expensive but it is still a WW-II fairbairn and not something I'd like to see lost. I am ordering another expensive dagger from my friend Travis down in Australia as soon as I get more money together. You'd think I would learn but the allure of these knives keeps me constantly on the lookout for the next one. I need to spend some time cleaning up the sheath and blade but here is the latest addition. I have somehow lost the image that was here. You would not believe how many folders of FS knives I have in my computer! It is insane. |
Author:You can find out more about me on the "Stories" pages. My hobbies have included training in Japanese martial arts, including Kenjutsu, many forms of knife fighting, long range rifles and tactical firearms. I have written several self published books on muzzle-loading firearms, knife-fighting and textbooks on gas engines and compressors. I am working diligently on my 400+ page F-S book. Categories |