nwoods
Expedition Leader
Axes never run out of gas...
Boy I don't know about that one. I had to clear a sizable pine tree from a trail a while back, and I was totally spent after whacking away at that thing for an hour or three
Last edited:
Axes never run out of gas...
Boy I don't know about that one. I had to clear a sizable pine tree from a tree a while back, and I was totally spent after whacking away at that thing for an hour or three
If you have to whack it for more than 4 hours; call a doctor.
In my relatively short time as a part of this community, I have seen a number of posts and pictures where someone has an axe mounted next to their shovel or hi-lift. To be honest - what for?
-JM
I have this http://www.forresttoolco.com/the_max.htmlOK, I'm sold... who can recommend a quality axe :sombrero:

They're great to have on board if you forgot a pack a spoon :ylsmoke:
No one has mentioned my favorite video on care and feeding of an axe, so here you go. It's a bit lengthy, but good work takes time.
Anywho, thanks for the fun read!
So I want to axe you guys a question (HaHaHaHaHaHa)
Sorry...
I saw that on the website, but I'm always cautious. I've only ever known of one company that truly offers to replace a broken product for any reason, weather its a factory defect or not and its not Fiskars. They're "Lifetime Warranty" is limited to factory defects. It offers nothing specific on if the head will separate or not under "abused" conditions. I also saw nothing on the website about using the ax as a striking tool and weather or not that is covered under "regular use" or "abuse".Fiskars says it won't break. Ad copy: "◾Inseparable PermaHead™ insert-molded head will not loosen and prevents overstrike breakage"
I have a Fiskars X26 splitting ax that we used last fall to chop a frozen oak tree that was on the trail. While there may have been some issues with our technique, there were certainly none with the axe.