[70521]
Well-Known Member
Can't think I used a knife onboard to cut a rope.Skipper wanted a piece of rope cutting and asked who had a knife.
Can't think I used a knife onboard to cut a rope.Skipper wanted a piece of rope cutting and asked who had a knife.
I have or had one of these.I have a knife with shackle key on a lanyard in one pocket and a load of lengths of string in the other.
I have used all three…
As a scout we were allowed to carry sheath knives (days long since gone and banned). It was part of our uniform.I've carried a pocket knife since I was a boy scout, I feel lost without it. It gets used several times a day, opening boxes, cutting tape, scraping (back edge), scoring wood, cutting tie wraps, sometimes even cutting rope!
Indeed. As a 10 year old in the 1960s/early 70s I and all my pals all carried knives. Some a penknife on a chain, some a sheath knife on a belt. Flicknives even. We knew how to sharpen them, oil and look after them. Nothing was thought of it. How we have gone backwards, how trust and personal responsibility has evaporated. Tragic really.As a scout we were allowed to carry sheath knives (days long since gone and banned). It was part of our uniform.
Used to use it at Summer camps every day for flipping bacon and rope work and stripping silver birch bark.
No one would ever consider it as a weapon in those days or in the Scout Group.
We had long staves that we ‘fought’ (played with) Robin Hood and Little John fashion; dangerous things to knuckles and heads!


There is one at the mast, near the winches, in the tool box, and obviously, in the galley. For me, that is safer than having to transfer it every time I change clothes. Each one has a long lanyard, is very easy to find, and very hard to lose. If someone asks, "blue lanyard, inside the companionway on the right."
No need for the Swiss army or multitool fiddlyness; there is a small tool kit in the same companionway location. Much better.
I have only once in may years needed a knife to cut a line.
I was going to say similar - in particular, I was surprised by how many times the spike comes in useful when you always have it right to hand.Weirdly, in decades I have no recollection of needing a knife when sailing and never carried one. Occasionally I'd fetch a kitchen knife or use a Gerber tool I keep below.
About a year ago I started to carry a combined knife, flat screwdriver, marlin spike and shackle key. Since then I seem to use it all the time.
Not sure what to conclude from that.
Was that the police examiner after you forgot to leave it on the boat?Knives are tools in my h. o.
My boat has them dotted around.
On a new (to me boat) I started engine and cast off from busy mooring field only to find I had not unlashed the tiller.
I had used fiddly paracord. A nearby knife saved me ramming the boats all around.
An examiner once asked me to show him my knife. He grilled me about many things in fact; a stressful examination.