
John

Who is the maker, and what model is that knife Scott?TripleF wrote:Thanks pal!Jdub wrote:Nice picture and even nicer knife!!TripleF wrote:yesterday
Took this a week or so ago....the tree was oozing sap!
Tony, that's an ANZA Cherokee Nation (Anza made for the Cherokee Indians in Cherokee, NC)Tony_Wood wrote:Who is the maker, and what model is that knife Scott?TripleF wrote:Thanks pal!Jdub wrote: Nice picture and even nicer knife!!
Took this a week or so ago....the tree was oozing sap!
Thanks. Have not seen those before. Good looking hollow grind.TripleF wrote:Tony, that's an ANZA Cherokee Nation (Anza made for the Cherokee Indians in Cherokee, NC)Tony_Wood wrote:Who is the maker, and what model is that knife Scott?TripleF wrote:
Thanks pal!
Took this a week or so ago....the tree was oozing sap!
Thanks. Appreciate the info.Quick Steel wrote:Tony I am sure that is an Anza knife. Don't know the model. The knives are made from files. I remember seeing one of their first ads about 20 years ago and wondering if they [father and son?] would succeed. Clearly they have been successful.
It is Floyd, but according to WIKI hackberry doesn't grow in the south where the sometimes mistaken for hackberry tree, sugarberry does.doglegg wrote:jmh, be hard to loose 2 of those if dropped. I like them.![]()
Scott, that bark looks like hackberry. But I'm no arborist. Are you the 'boy' in the woods until the other boys show up? I enjoy your enjoyment of the outdoors.
Thank You..sunknife wrote:Nice pics and knives John & Scott, good to see.
sunknife wrote:Nice pics and knives John & Scott, good to see.