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Stormgrain River-Edge Full-Tang Hunting Knife - Blue Wood

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28.49


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River Current Damascus Hunting Knife - Blue Wood

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A fixed blade hunting knife built like real kit, not wall art. This full-tang Damascus hunter runs a 5-inch clip-point with flowing “river” pattern and a 10-inch overall length that balances bite and control. The blue-and-brown contoured wood scales lock in when your hands are wet, while the weight gives you authority in bone and joint work. Paired with a fitted leather sheath, it’s a Damascus hunting knife you’ll actually take into the field, not just photograph.

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BC834DB

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Handle Length (inches)
  • Tang Type
  • Carry Method
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River Current Damascus Hunting Knife - Built for Real Field Work

The River Current Damascus Hunting Knife - Blue Wood is what happens when a traditional camp knife gets the steel and geometry it always deserved. Ten inches overall, five inches of clip-point Damascus, full tang you can see and feel through the contoured blue-and-brown wood. It’s not a safe queen. It’s the hunting knife you reach for when there’s meat to break down and daylight’s dropping fast.

Damascus Hunting Knife for Sale with Full-Tang Confidence

When you buy a fixed blade hunting knife, the question is simple: will it stay honest when things get messy? This Damascus hunting knife for sale answers that with full-tang construction that runs from tip to lanyard. That visible tang line along the spine isn’t decoration; it’s your insurance policy when you’re twisting through joint, levering through cartilage, or choking up for fine work on a cape.

The 5-inch clip-point profile is tuned for field dressing and camp chores. Enough belly to ride clean through a draw cut, enough point to separate joints without over-penetrating and ruining meat. At 10 inches overall and a solid 16 ounces, this isn’t a featherweight; it’s a knife that lets the steel do the work instead of your grip.

Why This Damascus Steel Works in the Field

Damascus can be either honest work steel or pure vanity. This one leans toward work. The patterned blade isn’t just there to look like moving water; the layered construction gives you a micro-toothed edge that bites into hide and fiber instead of skating over it. Once you’ve sharpened a real Damascus hunting knife and taken it through a full field dress and quarter, you feel the difference in how the edge comes back to life on a stone.

Clip-Point Geometry That Earns Its Keep

The clip-point grind on this knife gives you a tip precise enough for caping work but strong enough not to snap when you rotate through a joint. You get a usable swedge for penetration and a generous belly for slicing. On a real animal, that translates to fewer passes, cleaner cuts, and less hand fatigue.

Handle Ergonomics When Your Hands Are Wet

The blue-and-brown wood handle isn’t just about looks. The finger grooves, palm swell, and full tang exposure give you indexing when your hands are bloody, cold, or wet. Those brass-colored spacers and the mosaic pin anchor the scales while giving you just enough tactile transition points to know where you are on the handle without looking down. That’s the difference between camp-knife cosplay and something you can trust on a real pack-out.

Hunting Knife for Sale with Collector-Worthy Details

Collectors notice the details that never make it into catalog copy. The Damascus pattern on this blade runs clean and consistent from ricasso to tip—no muddy transition zones, no awkward flat patches where the grind killed the figure. The spine alignment along the full tang is tight, with the wood scales finished flush so there’s no hot spot chewing up your hand over a long day.

The mosaic pin in the handle is the quiet flex here. It signals that someone cared enough to go beyond simple hardware without turning this into a fragile showpiece. Wood segmentation—blue to brown with brass-colored spacers—gives the knife visual rhythm without compromising strength. It’s the kind of piece that looks right in a leather sheath on your belt and even better laid out on a bench next to a sharpening kit and a season’s worth of tags.

Carry-Ready Damascus Hunting Knife with Leather Sheath

All the steel in the world doesn’t matter if the knife rides wrong. The fitted black leather sheath with contrast stitching keeps this hunting knife for sale where it belongs: on your belt and out of the way until you need it. The sheath’s rigidity protects the Damascus edge while still allowing a clean, one-handed draw once you’ve built the muscle memory.

At 10 inches overall and 16 ounces, this is a belt knife, not a pocket carry. That weight on a solid leather loop means the knife moves with you instead of flopping or printing. For hunters and outdoorsmen who actually put miles under their boots, that carry behavior matters more than any catalog spec line.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Even though this is a fixed blade hunting knife, serious buyers in this space usually live in the same world as automatic knife, OTF, and switchblade enthusiasts. The questions are similar: legality, mechanism, and whether the piece is worth a place in the rotation.

Are automatic knives legal?

In the United States, automatic knives are legal to own and carry in many states, heavily restricted in others, and effectively banned in a few. Federally, the Switchblade Knife Act limits interstate commerce and shipping of automatic knives but does not outright ban ownership. The specifics come down to state law: some states allow automatic knives with blade length limits, some restrict carry but allow home ownership, and some have broadly permissive laws for autos, OTF knives, and traditional switchblades.

If you’re shopping for an automatic knife for sale alongside a fixed blade like this Damascus hunter, you need to check your state and local statutes before you buy or carry. Fixed blade hunting knives like this one are generally treated more leniently than automatic knives, but local rules on concealed carry, blade length, and location (schools, government buildings) still apply. When in doubt, read your state code and, if necessary, talk to local law enforcement or an attorney familiar with knife laws before you strap any blade on daily.

What’s the difference between an automatic knife, OTF, and a switchblade?

An automatic knife is any knife where a spring-driven blade deploys from a closed position with the push of a button, slide, or lever—no manual opening beyond that trigger action. Most side-opening autos look like a traditional folding knife, but the blade snaps out from the side under spring tension.

An OTF knife—out-the-front—is a specific kind of automatic knife where the blade travels linearly out of the front of the handle. Many OTFs are double-action, meaning the same control both deploys and retracts the blade under spring tension. A switchblade is the historical and legal term often used in statutes to describe automatic knives in general, particularly side-opening autos. Enthusiasts tend to reserve “OTF” for front-deploying mechanisms and “automatic knife” for the broader category that includes both OTF and side-opening designs.

This Damascus hunting knife is neither automatic nor OTF. It’s a fixed blade: the steel is permanently exposed and full tang. No springs, no mechanisms—just steel, handle, and sheath. If you’re used to tuning the action on an automatic knife, you’ll appreciate the different kind of reliability here: there’s simply nothing to fail.

What makes this hunting knife worth buying?

For a buyer who already owns a few autos and maybe an OTF or two, this knife earns its place by doing one thing extremely well: honest field work. The full-tang construction, 5-inch Damascus clip-point blade, and contoured blue-and-brown wood handle give you a hunting knife that will actually dress game, process wood, and live on your belt for an entire season.

You’re not paying for fantasy steel claims or mall-ninja styling. You’re paying for a Damascus blade that sharpens predictably, a handle that stays locked when your hands are slick, and a leather sheath that makes belt carry a non-issue. It’s the fixed blade equivalent of that automatic knife you always trust to fire cleanly: dependable, satisfying to use, and built to earn patina instead of dust.

For Hunters Who Respect Real Steel

If your kit already includes an automatic knife for quick access and a couple of folders for daily carry, this River Current Damascus Hunting Knife - Blue Wood plugs the last honest gap: a full-tang fixed blade that can do the heavy lifting. It’s heritage materials, functional geometry, and field-first design—exactly what you want in a hunting knife you plan to keep long after the trend pieces are gone.

Blade Length (inches) 5
Overall Length (inches) 10
Weight (oz.) 16
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Patterned
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Damascus Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Wood
Theme Damascus
Handle Length (inches) 5
Tang Type Full
Carry Method Sheath
Sheath/Holster Leather