Harvest Lineage Field-Pro Hunting Knife - White & Yellow Bone
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This fixed blade hunting knife is built for real field work, not the display case. A 7-inch polished stainless drop point rides on a full tang for predictable control when you’re elbow-deep in a deer or breaking down camp chores. The white-and-yellow bovine bone handle scales aren’t just pretty—they give honest traction and warmth in the hand. At 12 inches overall with a stitched leather sheath, this is the kind of hunting knife that earns its place on your belt season after season.
Harvest Lineage Field-Pro Hunting Knife – Built for Real Work, Not Hype
The Harvest Lineage Field-Pro Hunting Knife isn’t trying to be tactical, flashy, or overly clever. It does what a true fixed blade hunting knife is supposed to do: cut clean, handle predictably, and survive season after season of field use. At 12 inches overall with a 7-inch polished stainless drop point and full tang construction, it’s a traditional hunting tool executed with enough care that serious users and collectors both will give it a second look.
Why This Fixed Blade Hunting Knife Earns a Spot in the Field
In camp, a knife either pulls its weight or it goes back in the truck. This one earns its ride on your belt. The long, straight spine and gentle belly of the drop point make it ideal for controlled skinning passes, opening up game without blowing past the hide into organs. That same profile gives you a strong tip that resists snapping when you’re working through joints or cartilage.
The full tang is visible end to end, which is exactly what you want on a hunting knife that might be asked to baton kindling, break down a rib cage, or pry when you know you shouldn’t but do anyway. That spine continuity from pommel to tip means flex is predictable and failures are rare.
Blade Geometry That Makes Sense in the Field
The 7-inch blade length is deliberate. Short blades are great for caping or light EDC, but once you’re elbow-deep in a deer or hog, the extra length lets you reach, slice, and separate tissue without constantly regripping. The polished finish sheds blood and tissue faster than a rough stonewash and is easier to wipe clean in the field. A plain edge along the full length means you control every millimeter of cut—no gimmick serrations to hang up on hide or sinew.
Stainless Steel That Balances Maintenance and Use
The stainless steel here is chosen for real-world hunting conditions: moisture, blood, fat, maybe a weekend of neglect in a damp sheath. You’re trading absolute edge retention for corrosion resistance and easy touch-ups. For a field knife, that’s a smart decision. When you’re back at camp with a basic stone or pocket sharpener, you can bring this edge back quickly without fighting a high-carbide super steel.
Handle, Balance, and Carry: Where This Hunting Knife Earns Respect
The white-and-yellow bovine bone handle is what grabs your eye first, but the shape is what keeps it in your hand when things get slick. The handle is contoured with a pronounced finger guard and a flared butt, locking your hand in during push cuts and draw cuts. Bone is naturally warm and grippy compared to bare metal or cheap plastic, especially when the temperature drops.
Segmented bone scales, pinned to the full tang with multiple pins and a mosaic centerpiece, give this knife its personality. That mosaic pin is the collector detail—the nod that this is more than a commodity hunting knife, even though it’s built to be used hard.
Balance and Control in Real Use
At roughly 14 ounces, this is a substantial fixed blade hunting knife, not a skeletonized ultralight. That weight sits slightly forward of the guard, giving you enough authority in the cut for splitting kindling or rough camp work, while still allowing a choked-up grip for finer skinning and detail work. The full tang plus bone scales distribute that mass evenly, so the knife doesn’t feel like a crowbar in hand.
Leather Sheath Made for Quiet, Secure Carry
The included leather sheath is part of the story: stitched brown leather with contrast yellow stitching and a snap-retention strap. Leather rides quiet, doesn’t clatter on metal stands or tree stands, and molds over time to your specific knife. Belt carry keeps the fixed blade accessible without broadcasting a tactical look to everyone at camp. When you slide this knife into the sheath, it seats with that satisfying final stop you only get when the fit is dialed in.
Field Role: From Dressing Game to Camp Chores
This fixed blade hunting knife is clearly purpose-built for field dressing medium to large game, but it doesn’t stop there. That long drop point and robust spine handle everything from splitting the sternum on a whitetail to slicing rope, trimming branches, or doing basic food prep at camp. The polished stainless blade cleans up quickly after cutting meat or fat, and the bone handle doesn’t soak it in the way some porous woods can.
For collectors who actually use their knives, this lands in the sweet spot: it looks good enough to display, but not so delicate that you’ll hesitate to reach for it when it’s time to get dirty.
What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife
Even though this piece is a traditional fixed blade hunting knife, most serious knife buyers cross-shop categories. They’ll look at an automatic knife for sale, an OTF, a switchblade, and a fixed blade like this in the same session. So let’s address the common questions that come up in that broader conversation.
Are automatic knives legal?
In the United States, automatic knives (including side-opening automatics and many OTF knives) are legal to manufacture and sell at the federal level, but interstate commerce and carry are heavily influenced by state and local law. Federal law (the Switchblade Knife Act) mainly restricts shipping automatic knives across state lines in certain circumstances and bans shipment into a few specific jurisdictions, but it does not outright ban ownership nationwide.
State laws vary widely. Some states allow automatic knives and switchblades with few restrictions, some limit blade length, others restrict concealed carry, and a handful still prohibit automatics outright. OTF knives can be treated the same as other automatic knives or called out specifically. Before you buy an automatic knife or switchblade online, you should check current state and local regulations where you live and where you plan to carry. This fixed blade hunting knife, however, is not an automatic, not an OTF, and not a switchblade—it is a manually used fixed blade, which tends to be more broadly legal, especially for hunting and outdoor use, though local length and carry rules can still apply.
What’s the difference between an automatic knife, OTF, and a switchblade?
Mechanically, here’s how it breaks down:
- Automatic knife (side-opening): The blade is held closed under spring tension and deploys from the side of the handle when you press a button, push a lever, or actuate a hidden release. Once fired, it locks open like a conventional folder.
- OTF (out-the-front) automatic: The blade travels linearly out of the front of the handle instead of pivoting from the side. Single-action OTFs fire out under spring tension and must be manually retracted; double-action OTF knives both deploy and retract using the mechanism—often a thumb slide.
- Switchblade: In common U.S. legal language, "switchblade" is usually the umbrella term that includes both side-opening automatics and many OTF knives—basically any knife that opens automatically by pressing a button or similar device in the handle.
This Harvest Lineage Field-Pro Hunting Knife is none of those. It’s a fixed blade: no moving parts, no springs, no deployment mechanism. It’s always ready, which is exactly what you want for hunting and heavy camp work. Many enthusiasts own both an automatic knife for EDC convenience and a fixed blade hunting knife like this for serious field tasks.
What makes this hunting knife worth buying?
Two things separate this knife from the generic big-box shelf. First, the construction: full tang, polished stainless drop point, and a 7-inch blade that’s long enough for real game work without being unwieldy. This is a working geometry, not a fantasy profile. Second, the details: genuine white-and-yellow bovine bone scales pinned with a decorative mosaic pin, plus a leather sheath that’s stitched well enough to age with the knife. Those touches give it collector appeal without compromising function.
If you’re the type who owns an automatic knife for daily carry but still wants a traditional fixed blade hunting knife that looks right on the belt at deer camp, this piece fits that role. It’s not a safe queen, but it’s not disposable, either. It’s the tool you don’t mind bloodying because you know you can clean it up, touch up the edge, and hang it by the lanyard hole until next season.
Choosing a Fixed Blade Over an Automatic Knife for the Field
There’s a reason experienced hunters and guides still reach for a fixed blade when the work gets serious. An automatic knife for sale might win in speed of deployment and one-handed convenience, but once the blade is out, strength and stability matter more than the way it opened. A full tang fixed blade like this removes the hinge and the spring from the equation. You get a continuous steel spine, a simple, serviceable edge, and a handle that fills the hand.
Many enthusiasts carry both: an automatic knife or OTF in the pocket for day-to-day cutting, and a fixed blade hunting knife on the belt for when meat hits the ground or camp gets set up. If that sounds like your kind of kit, this Harvest Lineage Field-Pro is the traditional, bone-handled counterpart to the modern automatic knife in your rotation.
Own a Knife That Looks Like It Belongs at Deer Camp
In a world full of black-coated, aggressive-looking folders and every kind of automatic knife for sale, a polished, bone-handled fixed blade hunting knife stands out precisely because it isn’t trying to. The Harvest Lineage Field-Pro Hunting Knife pairs honest materials with proven geometry and a sheath that will break in alongside you. If you’re the kind of buyer who knows why you carry an automatic in your pocket but trust a fixed blade when the work gets real, this is the hunting knife that will quietly earn its place on your belt—and in your stories.
| Blade Length (inches) | 7 |
| Overall Length (inches) | 12 |
| Weight (oz.) | 14 |
| Blade Color | Silver |
| Blade Finish | Polished |
| Blade Style | Drop Point |
| Blade Edge | Plain |
| Blade Material | Stainless Steel |
| Handle Finish | Polished |
| Handle Material | Bovine Bone |
| Theme | None |
| Handle Length (inches) | 5 |
| Tang Type | Full |
| Carry Method | Sheath |
| Sheath/Holster | Leather |