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| SFReader Forums > SFReader > Anything Goes! > Pics of your swords and knives and other edged implements | Forum Quick Jump
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|  Jaqhama Adventurer

       Date Joined Oct 2007 Total Posts : 462 | Posted 4/29/2008 6:31 AM (GMT -4) |   |
Rob Mancebo said...
Jaqhama said... One of them is a birhtday present for a girl who likes unusual/exotic things, so it's a perfect gift for her.
We're happy with the ones we've bought. mainly because they are not common/everyday items. Unique is always good.
Cheers: Jaq. -- Yes, it's not every day you can get handmade presents blessed by Ma Kali.
-- I have a little 6", but that seems to be under-sized for it's purpose (It's still a nice piece though.) For bushes or beheadings the 12" blade is hard to beat as a good, all-around size.
-- Have fun with them!
You...ah...have any pics you'd care to share Rob?
Morbid curiosity ya know.
You can read some of my stories here:
Swamp Story. Down South. Florida Haze.Wild Justice...
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 |  Rob Mancebo Adept
        Date Joined Jul 2005 Total Posts : 909 | Posted 4/29/2008 4:00 AM (GMT -4) |   |
Jaqhama said... One of them is a birhtday present for a girl who likes unusual/exotic things, so it's a perfect gift for her.
We're happy with the ones we've bought. mainly because they are not common/everyday items. Unique is always good.
Cheers: Jaq. -- Yes, it's not every day you can get handmade presents blessed by Ma Kali.
-- I have a little 6", but that seems to be under-sized for it's purpose (It's still a nice piece though.) For bushes or beheadings the 12" blade is hard to beat as a good, all-around size.
-- Have fun with them!
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  |  Rob Mancebo Adept
        Date Joined Jul 2005 Total Posts : 909 | Posted 4/22/2008 12:03 AM (GMT -4) |   |
PaulMc said... That "rapier" would only be consider a rapier by a giant - it has a huge blade and gargantuan hilt.
- I've seen lots of rapiers catalogued that were noted to have 40+ inches of blade. In the 1600s Queen E. got tired of folks tripping over them in court and ordered any longer blades brought in to be snapped off at 36".
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  |  Frank Adept

       Date Joined Aug 2005 Total Posts : 629 | Posted 4/21/2008 6:17 PM (GMT -4) |   | | I see your Schwartz is as big as mine... now let's see how you handle it! | | Back to Top | | |
  |  Rob Mancebo Adept
        Date Joined Jul 2005 Total Posts : 909 | Posted 4/19/2008 5:48 PM (GMT -4) |   |
Steven the Git said...
I've always wondered about the drawing without shedding blood idea. Did sound a bit extreme but then that's probably why people like it. Sounds so... Klingon!
I pity the burgular who tries to rob Rob! As for the assegais, imagine finding those in the rubbish!
- The whole 'never to be sheathed without drawing blood' thing is perpetuated by the Gurkas themselves. I heard that story first from a soldier who'd worked with them in the '70's. (He--of course--had to get a kukri of his own). They told him the story saying that even to draw it to clean and oil it required a real warrior to cut himself so as not to return the weapon 'unbloodied'. This explains the smaller knives for menial work. No sence cutting yourself to use your blessed combat weapon to carve or peel potatos with. But they admitted, in these more peaceful times, people don't do that anymore.
- This story shows the darker side of the cult of Ma Kali (the incarnation of the violent wrath of God). Followers of the 'Short Path' must be careful not to become enamoured of violence and pain for they are merely an on-going challenge, not the path itself.
- Burglers?  Naaw, I have dogs, guns, swords, knives, and nothing expensive to entice them in.
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  |  Steven the Git Neophyte

       Date Joined Nov 2007 Total Posts : 195 | Posted 4/19/2008 10:51 AM (GMT -4) |   |
Jaqhama said...Contary to popular belief the kukri is just a working tool. Like the machete of south america. One doesn't have to draw blood before one re-sheathes it or any of that mystical crap. However it is an excellent close quarter combat weapon, its only weakness being the lack of a protective crosspiece on the hilt. The design is supposed to have been copied from the swords carried by the soldiers of Alexander the Great. But it's a very clever design...strike the blade against a flat surface and your fingers do not get crushed, the handle curve keeps them safe. The heavy front of the blade is for chopping. The balance of the knive is so good that with the thinner and sharper part of the blade in front of the hilt you can easily peel a potato. The back of the blade is a third of an inch thick, it can be used to hammer or strike with. People say you can't stab with a kukri, but that's not true. Thrust straight ahead with you wrist/arm straight and the point is perfectly in line. The sheath has a sharp spike on the bottom, it can also be used to stab with. My kukri was made from railway track. Yes that's right. The British at one time had a working railway system in Nepal, when they departed it was abandoned and the locals used the iron and steel...melted down...to make kukri's and other tools and implements from. Kukri's made locally in Nepal do go rusty, so one needs to polish the knives on occasion. Do I use mine much? Yes; an hour or so after I bought it in Salamanca Markets in Hobart, Tasmania I bogged the hire campervan in a grass field and used the brand new kukri to chop down some wood/brush to shove under the wheels of the van to help provide traction. I often take it hiking or on motorcycle trips. It's great for camp chores and for chopping firewood. It's also an excellent garden tool, for chopping brush and foliage. It made a great impromtu spade as well. The kukri is, without doubt, one of the most versatile knives in the world. Everything you wanted to know about the history, design and culture of the Kukri can be found here: http://www.himalayan-imports.com
I've always wondered about the drawing without shedding blood idea. Did sound a bit extreme but then that's probably why people like it. Sounds so... Klingon!
Thanks for this info, especially the stabbing part. I've thought of it as a cutter mainly, yet seeing the pic did make me think, couldn't that stab? Now I know.
I pity the burgular who tries to rob Rob! As for the assegais, imagine finding those in the rubbish! “Hello, I am William Burton, Head of Recruitment and Integration for the Agency for Peaceful Regulation and Definitive Cooperation of Extraordinary Existence.”
spinetinglers.co.uk Bakemono will not stop! | | Back to Top | | |
 |  Keralen Adept

       Date Joined Mar 2006 Total Posts : 529 | Posted 4/19/2008 9:36 AM (GMT -4) |   | | My mother had 2 or 3 antique assegais handed down from her dunno-howmany-great uncle, Daniel Lindley, who was a missionary in South Africa. Ferocious-looking things, 8-12-inch blades, one backed up with a series of about a dozen short, back-curved barbs guaranteed to make a mess. She got rid of them about 10 years ago when she was starting to lose her memory - they were creeping her out - and now of course there's no way of knowing where they got to. I hope a museum somewhere. | | Back to Top | | |
 |  crystalwizard Forum Moderator

       Date Joined Nov 2006 Total Posts : 4738 | Posted 4/19/2008 8:48 AM (GMT -4) |   | | | |
 |  Jaqhama Adventurer

       Date Joined Oct 2007 Total Posts : 462 | Posted 4/19/2008 8:02 AM (GMT -4) |   | Hey that's a good pic of you with the sword Rob. Lin right away noticed the Egyptian tapestry on the wall behind your computer. She's into Egypt stuff. The brass sheath on the knife looks well tasty mate.
The substance on the cane sword spike...it was still sticky and gooey...after who knows how many years?...I'm sure whatever lethal poison it contained was probably still active. I damn near poked the point to see how sharp it was, just as a voice inside my head screamed...DON'T TOUCH IT MORON!
I look forward to seeing some pics of the weapons on the wall behind you, especially the battle axe.
We just ordered two more from that website I posted a link to:
Two of these...for presents. They make great letter openers.
http://yhst-7333098713883.stores.yahoo.net/kagaskatne.html
And one of these for Lin to take with her when she's motorbiking/hiking or mountain biking/camping.
http://yhst-7333098713883.stores.yahoo.net/bilton.html
They are certainly not expensive for the quality involved.
You can read some of my stories here:
Swamp Story. Down South. Florida Haze.Wild Justice...
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 |  Rob Mancebo Adept
        Date Joined Jul 2005 Total Posts : 909 | Posted 4/19/2008 2:48 AM (GMT -4) |   |
Ooops, I take that back, I do have some more:
> >
http://flashingswords.sfreader.com/staffbios/rob.htm
> >
That's me holding a Norse broad sword with a gladius & Celtic dagger on the wall behind me. You can also see the hilt of a bastard sword behind me in the corner of my office. Scanning above the shot would reveal a battle axe over the window. >>
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 |  Rob Mancebo Adept
        Date Joined Jul 2005 Total Posts : 909 | Posted 4/19/2008 2:40 AM (GMT -4) |   |
Jaqhama said... Carrying on from Rob's thread and the subject of edged weapons some of us may own.
Here's my contribution.
Here's the only one I've got a photo on-line of. A Seax from MRL with decorated sheath and horn thrown in:
Adventure-History-Fantasy-Folklore
www.geocities.com/robmancebo/
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 |  Rob Mancebo Adept
        Date Joined Jul 2005 Total Posts : 909 | Posted 4/19/2008 2:24 AM (GMT -4) |   |
Jaqhama said...
When I first got the cane sword I discovered it had a spike hidden in the butt plate. Unscrewing it with difficulty I found the spike was covered in a black, sticky substance, which I can only assume was some kind of poison. I took great care to clean it off and re-polish the spike.
- Yes, little things like that are very-very hard to explain to the police. Better to clean away the evidence . . er. . . grime. That's what it is, just old grime from a previous murd-- owner. Adventure-History-Fantasy-Folklore
www.geocities.com/robmancebo/
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 |  Rob Mancebo Adept
        Date Joined Jul 2005 Total Posts : 909 | Posted 4/19/2008 2:16 AM (GMT -4) |   |
Jaqhama said... Do I use mine much? Yes; an hour or so after I bought it in Salamanca Markets in Hobart, Tasmania I bogged the hire campervan in a grass field and used the brand new kukri to chop down some wood/brush to shove under the wheels of the van to help provide traction. I often take it hiking or on motorcycle trips. It's great for camp chores and for chopping firewood. It's also an excellent garden tool, for chopping brush and foliage. It made a great impromtu spade as well.
The kukri is, without doubt, one of the most versatile knives in the world.
- That's the only piece of hardware I was ordered to remove while in the army. It just freaked out a "safety NCO". So I took it off . . . then put it back on when he left. (As a scout, we were off in the bush most of the time anyway.) I used it to cut cammo for vehicles and chop up, well, anything that needed it. A moderate sling from about a dozen feet away will put the blade 3" through a 1/2 inch piece of plywood too.
- An outstanding tool/weapon.
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 |  Jaqhama Adventurer

       Date Joined Oct 2007 Total Posts : 462 | Posted 4/18/2008 10:42 PM (GMT -4) |   | Contary to popular belief the kukri is just a working tool. Like the machete of south america. One doesn't have to draw blood before one re-sheathes it or any of that mystical crap. However it is an excellent close quarter combat weapon, its only weakness being the lack of a protective crosspiece on the hilt.
The design is supposed to have been copied from the swords carried by the soldiers of Alexander the Great. But it's a very clever design...strike the blade against a flat surface and your fingers do not get crushed, the handle curve keeps them safe. The heavy front of the blade is for chopping. The balance of the knive is so good that with the thinner and sharper part of the blade in front of the hilt you can easily peel a potato. The back of the blade is a third of an inch thick, it can be used to hammer or strike with. People say you can't stab with a kukri, but that's not true. Thrust straight ahead with you wrist/arm straight and the point is perfectly in line. The sheath has a sharp spike on the bottom, it can also be used to stab with.
My kukri was made from railway track. Yes that's right. The British at one time had a working railway system in Nepal, when they departed it was abandoned and the locals used the iron and steel...melted down...to make kukri's and other tools and implements from. Kukri's made locally in Nepal do go rusty, so one needs to polish the knives on occasion.
Do I use mine much? Yes; an hour or so after I bought it in Salamanca Markets in Hobart, Tasmania I bogged the hire campervan in a grass field and used the brand new kukri to chop down some wood/brush to shove under the wheels of the van to help provide traction. I often take it hiking or on motorcycle trips. It's great for camp chores and for chopping firewood. It's also an excellent garden tool, for chopping brush and foliage. It made a great impromtu spade as well.
The kukri is, without doubt, one of the most versatile knives in the world.
Everything you wanted to know about the history, design and culture of the Kukri can be found here: http://www.himalayan-imports.com
You can read some of my stories here:
Swamp Story. Down South. Florida Haze.Wild Justice...
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  |  Hamstersbane Acolyte

       Date Joined Feb 2007 Total Posts : 390 | Posted 4/18/2008 2:21 PM (GMT -4) |   |
Jaqhama said...
che2000 said...Is this a thread for 'Reader's Knives'? (Heh, heh)
Oh that's cutting.
Do I detect an edge in your tone? Looks like he may have pricked you a bit, not to put too fine a point on it.
No matter how you slice it, this whole thread is getting kind of dicey.
Quit trying to cut me off! I was just trying to take a stab at it...
Jeff Parish Jennings Grove, an online horror serial novel
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