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Filter Bushcraft Knives · Knives & Tools · Woodwork, Tinder & Camp

Bushcraft Knives
Morakniv Garberg, BeaverCraft BSH & Hultafors

Fixed blade knives with Scandi grind for woodwork, feathersticks, tinder and campfire – from the premium full-tang classic Morakniv Garberg through the BeaverCraft BSH series in European high-carbon steel to the Swedish carbon classic Hultafors. Freely available in Switzerland, stocked in Menzingen with personal advice.

What defines a bushcraft knife?
  • Fixed blade with Scandi grind – 20-degree bevel angle, no secondary bevel
  • Blade lengths 9 to 11 cm – the sweet spot for woodwork, tinder and all-purpose
  • Tang construction: Full Tang for batoning, Hidden Tang for lightweight build
  • Blade steels: Carbon (Morakniv C, BeaverCraft 1066/65G, Hultafors) and Stainless (Morakniv S)
  • Handle materials: wood, birch bark, polymer, G10 – warm in the hand
  • Freely available in Switzerland, no justified reason required (Article 4 Weapons Act)

What is bushcraft anyway?

Bushcraft is the art of finding your way in the woods with minimal gear – preparing tinder, carving a featherstick, lighting a campfire, building a shelter, crafting tools from wood. The term originates in the Australian and North American outdoor tradition and established itself in Europe via the Scandinavian school (Mörs Larsson, Lars Fält). The bushcraft knife is the central tool: fixed blade, Scandi grind, medium blade length, robust build. Not too small for splitting, not too big for fine carving.

Classic fields of use: woodwork (feathersticks from pine or birch, whittling, spoon and cup blanks), tinder preparation (fire material from birch bark, fatwood, hay), batoning (splitting wood with the help of a baton), campfire preparation and general outdoor tasks. For pure woodcarving and detailed work, dedicated carving tools are the more precise choice. For large wood and dense growth, an axe or a machete is the better partner. The bushcraft knife is the robust all-rounder in between.

When does a bushcraft knife fit?

A bushcraft knife is the specialist among fixed blade knives: more precise on wood than a hunting knife, more robust than a carving knife, more compact than a survival knife. Ideal for everyone working or overnighting in the woods and needing a reliable tool that doesn’t fail even after several hundred feathersticks and batoning runs.

If you need a robust all-round outdoor knife with a drop-point blade that’s also survival-capable, look at the outdoor and survival knives. For big game and stalking, hunting knives with a clip point are more suitable. For pocket-friendly EDC carry, take a folding knife or one-handed knife. The bushcraft knife is the dedicated forest specialist with Scandi grind and carbon or stainless blade in the 9–11-cm length.

Tang construction and blade shape

The tang construction (the blade extension running into the handle) determines load capacity, the blade shape determines typical application. For bushcraft, two tang constructions are common:

  • Full Tang – The blade extends at full width and length to the end of the handle, with handle scales riveted or screwed on both sides. Maximum load capacity for batoning, prying and tough outdoor tasks. Slightly heavier, but practically indestructible. Examples: Morakniv Garberg, BeaverCraft BSH series.
  • Hidden Tang (3/4 Tang) – The blade transitions into a narrower tang concealed in the handle. Lighter and more ergonomic, sufficiently stable for normal bushcraft tasks. Classic on traditional Swedish bushcraft knives.

For bushcraft beginners and everyone who regularly practises batoning, we recommend Full Tang – the additional stability is decisive in an emergency. Hidden Tang remains the traditional lightweight classic for hiking tours with reduced weight.

Blade shapeCharacteristicIn bushcraft
Drop PointGently descending blade spine, robust tipAll-purpose, featherstick, whittling (Morakniv Garberg)
SpearpointSymmetrically tapering, central tipPrecision and piercing, Mora 2000
Bushcraft bladeClassic drop-point shape with Scandi grindWoodwork, tinder, featherstick (BeaverCraft BSH)
Clip PointCurved blade spine, fine tapered tipMore hunting, less bushcraft
Scandinavian shapeTall blade with straight spine lineTraditional Sloyd and bushcraft classic

For bushcraft, Drop Point and the classic bushcraft blade are first choice – they offer stability at the tip and enough belly for fine cuts. Spearpoint is the symmetrical variant for stalking and general outdoor tasks.

Blade steels for bushcraft

For bushcraft knives, the steel determines three properties: edge retention (how long does the blade stay sharp), corrosion resistance (how critical is moisture) and field sharpenability (with a simple stone). Our range covers the most important bushcraft classes:

SteelHardness (HRC)PropertiesIn our range
Carbon «C» (Sandvik)~58–62Very sharp, easy to sharpen, rust-prone – develops patinaMorakniv Garberg BlackBlade C, Mora 2000 C
1066 / 65G (high-carbon)~57–62European high-carbon, precision-ground with Scandi bevelBeaverCraft BSH series
Stainless 14C28N (Sandvik)~57–60Rust-resistant, balanced, low maintenanceMorakniv Garberg S
Hultafors Carbon~58–60Swedish classic carbon, traditional designHultafors OK1, OK4
Laminated Carbon «LC»~58–62 (core)Sandwich of hard core and soft jacket, Sloyd traditionMorakniv LC models

Pure carbon steel is the traditional bushcraft choice – it takes the finest edge and can be touched up in the woods with a simple water stone or a flat field stone. Downside: carbon rusts without care, but builds up a dark patina over time that provides additional surface protection. Stainless is the low-maintenance compromise for damp conditions and multi-day tours without intensive care. For beginners we often recommend the stainless variant of the Garberg, for traditionalists the carbon versions.

What to look for when buying

Five factors decide which bushcraft knife fits your use:

  • Blade length – 9 to 11 cm is the ideal bushcraft sweet spot. Blades under 9 cm are more compact (BeaverCraft BSH KID for children, Mora 2000), but limited for batoning. Blades over 11 cm target more survival and heavy outdoor tasks.
  • Tang construction – Full Tang for batoning, survival and maximum load capacity (Garberg, BeaverCraft BSH). Hidden Tang as a traditional lightweight build for hiking tours.
  • Blade steel – Carbon for fine sharpness and easy resharpening (pure bushcraft, dry conditions). Stainless for low-maintenance use in damp environments and multi-day tours.
  • Handle material – Polymer (TPE, FRN) is affordable, light and grippy – classic on Morakniv. G10 or Micarta are more robust and grippy even when wet. Real wood and birch bark like on the BeaverCraft models are aesthetic and warm in the hand, but need slightly more care.
  • Sheath – Polymer sheaths (Morakniv Garberg) are light and often come with a MOLLE system or belt clip. Leather sheaths are classic and complement carbon blades, but require care.

For a complete overview of all knives, see the main category Knives & Tools; related filters under fixed blade, hunting knives and outdoor and survival knives.

Brands in our range

Morakniv – the Swedish bushcraft classic

Morakniv (Mora, Sweden, founded 1891) is the reference for the Nordic bushcraft knife and standard equipment in many Swedish workshops and outdoor backpacks. Two focal points in the bushcraft range: first, the Garberg as a full-tang premium classic – available in Stainless (Garberg S Survival Kit, 14C28N Sandvik) and in BlackBlade Carbon with DLC coating. Second, the Mora 2000 series as a compact, light outdoor all-rounder in green (stalking) and orange (driven hunt, mushroom collection). Characteristic: precise Scandi grind, Sandvik steels (Carbon, Laminated, Stainless), outstanding price-to-performance ratio.

BeaverCraft – European high-carbon steel

BeaverCraft (Lviv, Ukraine, founded 2014) is the specialised bushcraft brand in our range. The BSH series (BSH1, BSH2, BSH3, BSH4 and BSH5 Shadow) is consistently designed as a full-tang bushcraft knife with Scandi grind, plus the BSH KID bushcraft knife for children with a rounded blade tip. The blades are made from European high-carbon steel (1066 or 65G), heat-treated to 57–62 HRC and precision-ground with Scandi bevel and 20-degree blade angle. Important: the blades are laser-cut from EU sheet steel and press-formed, not freehand-forged – the industrial process ensures consistent quality and a fair price-to-performance ratio. Only the BeaverCraft bushcraft axes (AX1, AX6) are actually hand-forged.

Hultafors – Swedish outdoor tradition

Hultafors (Hultafors, Sweden, since 1883) is one of the most traditional Swedish tool manufacturers and represented in our bushcraft range with the OK1 and OK4 outdoor knives in carbon steel. Characteristic: solid, no-nonsense Swedish design, excellent price-to-performance ratio and the typical Swedish carbon-steel grind. Ideal for bushcraft beginners and everyone looking for a robust woodworking knife at a small price. Blade lengths just below the full-tang level, traditional hidden-tang build.

Who is a bushcraft knife made for?

  • ✓ Bushcrafters who prepare featherstick, tinder and campfire with a Scandi grind
  • ✓ Outdoor enthusiasts and hikers as a robust all-rounder on belt or backpack
  • ✓ Survival trainers and outdoor instructors with full-tang requirements
  • ✓ Scout leaders and group instructors for woodwork in groups
  • ✓ Bushcraft beginners with Garberg or BeaverCraft BSH1 as a first bushcraft knife
  • ✓ Parents who want to introduce their children to bushcraft (BeaverCraft BSH KID)
  • ✓ Collectors of Scandinavian outdoor classics (Morakniv, Hultafors)

Frequently asked questions – bushcraft knives

What sets a bushcraft knife apart from a normal outdoor knife?

Three characteristics: First, the Scandi grind, a blade geometry with a single flat grinding angle (about 20 degrees per side) without a secondary bevel – ideal for precise woodwork. Second, the medium blade length of 9 to 11 cm – big enough for batoning, small enough for fine featherstick carving. Third, the robust tang construction, mostly Full Tang, for intensive woodwork and occasional prying. A normal outdoor or survival knife often has a hollow grind or flat grind with a secondary bevel, is usually larger (12–15 cm) and designed for all-purpose tasks instead of woodwork.

Are bushcraft knives freely available in Switzerland?

Yes. Fixed-blade bushcraft knives are freely available and may be carried without special restrictions under Article 4 of the Swiss Weapons Act. You don’t need a justified reason to carry a bushcraft knife. Prohibited, however, are butterfly/balisong knives, gravity knives, switchblades with blades over 5 cm and throwing knives – but those are all special types and not bushcraft knives. Source: fedpol.admin.ch.

Full Tang or Hidden Tang – which is better?

For bushcraft we recommend Full Tang. Full Tang means the blade extends at full width and length to the end of the handle with handle scales riveted or screwed on both sides – this makes the knife practically indestructible under lateral load, prying and batoning. You can recognise Full Tang because a thin blade strip is visible at the top and bottom of the handle. Examples: Morakniv Garberg, BeaverCraft BSH series. Hidden Tang is the more traditional lightweight variant – more ergonomic and lighter, but slightly less load-capable. A valid alternative for hiking tours with reduced weight.

What is a Scandi grind?

The Scandi grind (also Scandi bevel) is the typical Nordic blade geometry: a single flat grinding angle of about 20 degrees per side from the spine to the edge, without a secondary bevel. Advantage: the blade enters wood precisely and in a controlled way – ideal for featherstick, whittling and woodwork. Disadvantage: in all-purpose cutting (packaging, ropes) somewhat less universal than hollow grind or flat grind. Classic on Morakniv and BeaverCraft, hallmark of the Scandinavian bushcraft tradition. When sharpening, the Scandi bevel is laid flat on the stone, which makes the maintenance procedure very simple.

Carbon or stainless – which steel?

Both have their justification. Carbon steel (Morakniv Garberg BlackBlade C, BeaverCraft BSH series 1066/65G, Hultafors OK1/OK4) is very sharp, can be honed to razor sharpness with a simple stone and cuts wood precisely – but rusts without care and needs regular wiping and light oiling. Stainless (Morakniv Garberg S in 14C28N Sandvik) is rust-resistant and low-maintenance, but slightly less edge-retentive. For pure bushcraft in dry conditions, carbon is first choice; for damp environments, multi-day tours without intensive care or saltwater contact, stainless is the safer bet.

Are BeaverCraft bushcraft knives hand-forged?

No, the BeaverCraft bushcraft knives of the BSH series are not hand-forged. The blades are made in an industrial process from European high-carbon steel sheet (1066 or 65G), laser-cut and press-formed, then heat-treated to 57–62 HRC and precision-ground with Scandi bevel and 20-degree blade angle. Final assembly (handles, sheaths) and quality control are done by hand. The industrial process ensures consistent blade quality and a fair price-to-performance ratio. The only BeaverCraft products that are actually hand-forged are the bushcraft axes AX1 and AX6.

Which blade length is ideal for bushcraft?

The sweet spot lies between 9 and 11 cm blade length. In this range you have enough blade surface for batoning (splitting smaller wood with the help of a baton) and at the same time the necessary control for fine carving (featherstick, spoon blank). Blades under 9 cm like the BeaverCraft BSH KID are more compact and ideal for children, smaller hands or as a secondary knife. Blades over 11 cm target more outdoor and survival use with rougher woodwork. Practically all recommended bushcraft classics (Morakniv Garberg, BeaverCraft BSH1–BSH4) sit exactly in this sweet-spot range.

How do I sharpen a bushcraft knife correctly?

For carbon-steel blades with Scandi grind (Morakniv Garberg C, BeaverCraft BSH, Hultafors OK1/OK4), a simple water stone with grit 1’000 and 3’000 or a classic natural sharpening stone is enough. Important: lay the Scandi bevel flat on the stone, without a secondary bevel – that produces the typical wood precision. For stainless blades (Garberg S), diamond stones or guided sharpening systems with a fixed angle (Lansky, KME) at 18 to 22 degrees per side are recommended. A leather strop at the end brings razor sharpness. In the woods, a flat field stone or a small diamond file is often enough for touch-ups. More choice of stones in the sharpener filter.

How do I look after a carbon-steel bushcraft knife?

Carbon steel rusts when not kept dry – that’s not a defect, it’s a property. Three points are enough: First, after each use, wipe the blade with a dry cloth; in damp conditions, additionally rub with a hint of Ballistol or gun oil. Second, don’t submerge in dishwater and don’t store wet in the sheath – residual moisture builds up there. Third, after saltwater or blood contact, clean immediately. Over time, carbon steel develops a dark patina – that’s desired and provides additional surface protection. A forced patina (e.g. with apple cider vinegar or mustard) can accelerate this protection.

Which bushcraft knife is good for beginners?

For getting started we recommend three models: the Morakniv Garberg S Survival Kit (Stainless 14C28N, Full Tang, polymer sheath with MOLLE) as a low-maintenance all-rounder – probably the most-recommended bushcraft entry choice in Europe. The BeaverCraft BSH1 (carbon steel 1066, Scandi grind, leather sheath) as a classic bushcraft knife with a warm wood handle and leather sheath – the pure bushcraft experience. The Hultafors OK1 as a budget-conscious alternative with Swedish carbon tradition. For children or very young bushcraft beginners, the BeaverCraft BSH KID with rounded blade tip is the right choice. Important for all beginners: first practise featherstick and whittling in wood before moving to batoning – blade control matters more than blade size.

What is batoning and can I do it with my bushcraft knife?

Batoning is the splitting of wood with the help of a striking stick (baton): you place the knife on the wood to be split, strike a baton on the blade spine and drive the blade through the wood. With a full-tang bushcraft knife of sufficient blade length (at least 1 cm longer than the wood is thick) this is easily possible and a standard bushcraft technique. With hidden-tang knives, batoning is recommended only with restraint, since the load at the blade-tang junction can be high. For large wood from about 10 cm diameter, we recommend a bushcraft axe or a machete as a complementary tool.

Does Swiss-Sale.ch ship from a Swiss warehouse?

Yes. All bushcraft knives are available from our warehouse in Menzingen (ZG) – no waiting time, no customs fees. Free shipping within Switzerland and Liechtenstein from CHF 100. Personal advice in our showroom or by phone at 041 755 34 33. In case of dissatisfaction, our 30-day voluntary right of return applies.

Discover bushcraft knives now

Original goods stocked in Switzerland · Free shipping from CHF 100 · Personal advice at 041 755 34 33

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