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Quoted: This is what I call a brush axe or bush axe. What do you call this tool? https://i.ibb.co/ThRt0gb/IMG-0213.jpg View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Bush axe I have one I have owned so long I am on the second handle. It is a bush axe. This is what I call a brush axe or bush axe. What do you call this tool? https://i.ibb.co/ThRt0gb/IMG-0213.jpg i'd call that a sandvik |
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Quoted: Good timing. Wife and I want to clear our half acre here on the big island of some 9 ft tall elephant grass. View Quote Scything with a single grip snath |
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Quoted: This is a sling blade. They have a straighter handle instead of an axe style handle. Usually have 2 or 3 rivets or screws. The head about the same thickness as a machete. https://i.ibb.co/hYWvFGD/IMG-0214.jpg View Quote That's a ditch bank blade. It will cut a 3 inch thick magnolia sapling in one swing. |
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Quoted: As a surveyor with decades of experience cutting lines I call it a bad day. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/190943/FAACD994-FC0C-484B-918F-AA5F2A75B0A0-3033651.jpg I keep this exact one in my truck and have always referred to it as a brush hook. I guess I'll have to start calling it a bank blade now. Appreciate the correction, and the trail work manual is a great source, thank you! View Quote Haha that's how I have experience with them. Cutting line on a survey crew. |
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Quoted: Here’s the guide that shows what the USDA calls these hand tools: https://www.pcta.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/handtools_for_trail_work.pdf I think the regional colloquialisms are cool. View Quote From that reference, you have a Council Single-Edge Eye-and-Strap Brush Hook shown in the OP. I suppose it would work as a Kaiser blade if you were driven. |
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Quoted: This is a sling blade. They have a straighter handle instead of an axe style handle. Usually have 2 or 3 rivets or screws. The head about the same thickness as a machete. https://i.ibb.co/hYWvFGD/IMG-0214.jpg View Quote I still call that a brush hook. Spent untold hours hacking line with them . Fuck that shit |
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Kaiser Blade, some folks call it a Sling Blade. I call it a Kaiser Blade.
Like the highway boys use. |
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Quoted: This is a sling blade. They have a straighter handle instead of an axe style handle. Usually have 2 or 3 rivets or screws. The head about the same thickness as a machete. https://i.ibb.co/hYWvFGD/IMG-0214.jpg View Quote That's a bank blade. A sling blade is for grass, not brush. |
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Quoted: That's a bank blade. A sling blade is for grass, not brush. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: This is a sling blade. They have a straighter handle instead of an axe style handle. Usually have 2 or 3 rivets or screws. The head about the same thickness as a machete. https://i.ibb.co/hYWvFGD/IMG-0214.jpg That's a bank blade. A sling blade is for grass, not brush. I heard both of these tools pictured called sling blades. |
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Quoted: Hedgerower https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WoprVhpOKIk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WoprVhpOKIk View Quote His assistant looks like good breeding stock. Wonder if she can cook? |
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Quoted: At the end of my backyard, between my yard and the woods, there is growth of sticker bushes and whatever is called with the prickly balls headed towards my yard. Is this the top I would need to go berserk on them? I tried my weed eater and the growth laughed at me. View Quote |
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Quoted: This is a sling blade. They have a straighter handle instead of an axe style handle. Usually have 2 or 3 rivets or screws. The head about the same thickness as a machete. https://i.ibb.co/hYWvFGD/IMG-0214.jpg View Quote This is what we usually have down here. I actually need to replace a handle on one of the smaller ones now. Heard it called kaiser blade, ditch bank blade, etc. but yeah, lol, mostly a whole lot of work. |
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Quoted: I heard both of these tools pictured called sling blades. https://i.ibb.co/R2KFZWz/IMG-0221.jpg View Quote We called the tool on the left a Yo-Yo. |
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Ditch blank blade.
I call it a ditch blade. Have one with a fabricated heavy extended pipe handle, it gets fencerow brush done, but it sucks to use. |
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In the Forest Service we called them a brush hook. Always kept them sharp as a knife to cut fibrous stringy sticks. Dangerous as hell because if you were not paying attention to your swing, it would glance off and hit the shin. Then it is a workers comp injury. I always preferred to let the inmate crews do that work.
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Quoted: In the Forest Service we called them a brush hook. Always kept them sharp as a knife to cut fibrous stringy sticks. Dangerous as hell because if you were not paying attention to your swing, it would glance off and hit the shin. Then it is a workers comp injury. I always preferred to let the inmate crews do that work. View Quote I’ve seen NFS hand crews and firefighters wearing knee and shin guards that look like baseball catchers. I assume to prevent this if they will stop the blade. |
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Quoted: At the end of my backyard, between my yard and the woods, there is growth of sticker bushes and whatever is called with the prickly balls headed towards my yard. Is this the top I would need to go berserk on them? I tried my weed eater and the growth laughed at me. That tool should do nicely. View Quote |
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Quoted: Hedgerower https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WoprVhpOKIk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WoprVhpOKIk View Quote I enjoyed that. Thanks! |
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Bush axe or bush hook. Got my first one in'94 when I got my first surveying job, still have it. Don't use it much anymore, replace by a machete and chain saw.
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Quoted: I heard both of these tools pictured called sling blades. https://i.ibb.co/R2KFZWz/IMG-0221.jpg View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: This is a sling blade. They have a straighter handle instead of an axe style handle. Usually have 2 or 3 rivets or screws. The head about the same thickness as a machete. https://i.ibb.co/hYWvFGD/IMG-0214.jpg That's a bank blade. A sling blade is for grass, not brush. I heard both of these tools pictured called sling blades. https://i.ibb.co/R2KFZWz/IMG-0221.jpg First one is a sling blade, second is a brush hook. I have and hate both. |
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Quoted: Here’s the guide that shows what the USDA calls these hand tools: https://www.pcta.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/handtools_for_trail_work.pdf I think the regional colloquialisms are cool. View Quote Thanks for the guide! I saved it. |
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Quoted: At the end of my backyard, between my yard and the woods, there is growth of sticker bushes and whatever is called with the prickly balls headed towards my yard. Is this the top I would need to go berserk on them? I tried my weed eater and the growth laughed at me. View Quote Herbicide |
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Looks close to a kaiser blade to me.
Close enough that that's what I would call it. |
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Quoted: This is a sling blade. They have a straighter handle instead of an axe style handle. Usually have 2 or 3 rivets or screws. The head about the same thickness as a machete. https://i.ibb.co/hYWvFGD/IMG-0214.jpg View Quote This is a sling blade Now imagine my confusion at the movie and the tool he used to do the deed. |
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I was on a field survey crew in 1970 and two of us were goofing off taking whacks at a Hawthorn bush with our brush hooks. I took a mighty swing, hit a tough Hawthorn branch, not cutting it but knocking it down at a high rate of speed. It hit my head and drove a 3" thorn into my head between the skin and bone - we didn't have on our hard hats either. I had to get the survey party chief to come over and pull the damn thing out. That was the day I found out how tough a Hawthorn tree is.
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Quoted: Yes, I think a bill hook is longer and is often seen in medieval battle scenes like Braveheart. The conscripted / hired rabble just brought their implements. A bill is handy for lopping limbs , tree or human. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Isn't a bill hook on a long shaft for pruning trees? Yes, I think a bill hook is longer and is often seen in medieval battle scenes like Braveheart. The conscripted / hired rabble just brought their implements. A bill is handy for lopping limbs , tree or human. Various names used, Billhooks aren't uncommon in the UK and but in common forestry parlance are normally short handled. So much so that the long handled Billhook gets called out. Even then it's not a "pole". If you've watched Clarkson's Farm you'll see a few examples as it's very handy for Hedge-laying in that episode - and in clearing Forest Tracks and Greenlanes. Attached File ETA: Cap from briantsltd.co.uk @Bucc_Guy could prolly authoritatively lay out the historical. |
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