You cut your finger through casual contact with the edge while washing blood off the blade.
I can’t put that kind of edge on my knife, but a few strokes on a stone restores it on my hatchet after two years’ use whacking kindling.
I highly endorse Fiskar hatchets*. Also, typing this has given me an owie.
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*No, nobody paid me to say that.

















































Wait a minute. The chicken chopping was yesterday. Did you wait until today to wash the hatchet? Might have something to do with it. Anyway, I always used a brush, hot soapy water, and wiped it down with an oily rag laid out on the bench, not in my hands. I’m allergic to owies from sharp objects. 🙂
No, of course I cleaned my blades yesterday. But typing this morning reminds me that my fingertip hurts. 🙂
And anyway, there’s another chicken due to die this week but since I’m going to eat that one it has a reprieve until I have proper stew ingredients.
C’mon Joel, Fiskars must have dropped a big bag of cash outside the secret lair. Some sort of new viral marketing tactic.
Never bought any of their tools before, some of their stuff just looks too plastic-y. Did pick up a nice old no-name hatchet head at a flea market a couple years back. Still use my good forest axe for things I should probably be using the hatchet for though.
My go-to chopping implement is an old carbon steel (with cracking wood handle) cane knife/machete. I’ve butchered with it, chopped down trees, cut brush, shaved poles for tool handles.. you name it. Bought the thing used-and-beat-up at a flea market 20 years ago. Still does the job(s). That said, I have had good luck with Fiskars tools, aside from one hatchet edge prone to chipping.
I have the Fiskars hatchet with slightly longer handle. Works great for splitting kindling. No chickens to try it on yet. I also have the Fiskars splitting axe. Works really great, easiest axe to date I have used. Splits oak and mesquite with little cursing.
I had to snicker when I read that’you cut your finger,so it must be sharp.’
If I cut my finger on my axe blade,it’s usually cause I ran my finger across a buur that I turned up when I hit a nail while chopping up scrap wood.
All kidding aside,I have Fiskers game shears,knives,and axes,and they all work well and sharpen up easily.
I have the slightly longer hatchet. Mine is branded Gerber, but its the same unit, just different labeling. I can chop and split kindling, build a hasty shelter, and still shave with it next morning (at least, I could if I ever shave). Good tools.
The Fiskar hollow handles are great places to carry ‘goodies’ as well. I don’t have any of the hatchet / axes but do have that ‘bush hook’ tool and I keep a file inside the handle for touch ups on blade. I just jambed a hank of the orange ‘hay bale’ twine to keep it in place, that comes in just as handy as well.