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Thread: best tool for aiding with bush bashing

  1. #1
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    best tool for aiding with bush bashing

    Just wondering if anyone has any opinions on the best tool to have on hand for helping off track exploring. I'm specifically thinking back to last time i gave it a go and got tangled up in a nightmare of supple jack, but it really goes for all the typical things you'd run into. I guess the choices are the usual suspects of knife, axe, machete, and saw, but i saw somewhere some military guy mentioned taking a pair of secateurs with them and it got me thinking that maybe there's other options out there which work well (billhook? who knows). I'd actually be surprised if simple secateurs were up to getting through supplejack as its so hard, anyone tried it ?

  2. #2
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    secateurs are probably the most practical but a folding silky saw would be the most versatile
    chainsaw, Micky Duck, MB and 3 others like this.

  3. #3
    Member Bobba's Avatar
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    Welcome to the forum.

    Swinging a machete or sawing all day is hard work and noisey. And destructive.

    I've heard that lot of people use secateurs in tight spots but havnt tried it myself. I usually go around it or smash through it swearing, cursing and falling on my ass.
    veitnamcam, 308, Scouser and 1 others like this.

  4. #4
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    Quality Secateurs are certainly up to the job, it’s the operators that often aren’t. Another option is a Silky Comtaro pruning saw.
    Swanny likes this.

  5. #5
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    putting in possum monitoring lines on Mt Taranaki a pair of secateurs and a silky saw were standard equipment - the supple jack on that mountains lower reaches is horrendous - buy quality secateurs - but putting in monitoring lines at Kaitaia then it was always only a machete - just different kind of bush - for more permanent tracks a hook slasher is good - but ya just cant beat a 45cc stihl scrub bar and a steel triangular blade yeah ha
    XR500 likes this.

  6. #6
    Member Micky Duck's Avatar
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    Yip siccateers are great. A machete is ok a hook slasher used the opposite to how you think works awesome on fern n small stuff.push it forwards n up and it cuts better as catches stem ncuts through but if you cut down it just bends it.big loppers great in slightly fatter branches n vines but pain to carry.loppets etc for track cutting days.siccateers when hunting.
    75/15/10 black powder matters

  7. #7
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    Brian and Puffin like this.

  8. #8
    Jus
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    Silky saw pocket boy. When I used to pighunt id take a pair loppers and cutttacks through kiekie and supple jack and the likes, then once in while prune with a small a pair of hand secateurs. As a deer hunter now, the illy saw pocket boy goes everywhere with me
    trapperjohn likes this.

  9. #9
    Member Brian's Avatar
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    Very good to have when a deer lands in ongaonga

  10. #10
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    Secateurs and battery mini electric chainsaw if you intend to reuse your trail
    Micky Duck likes this.

  11. #11
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    For supplejack (aka cu**vine - there are bush and shrub versions in stinging nettle and hookgrass) the secateurs are the go but you want the ones with mechanical advantage in them as they get a bit hard on the hands after a while. There's a technique for hunting with them, tuck your cutting arm over the vine holding it with your shoulder and other side of the cut with your free hand so the vine doesn't whip away after you cut the thing. That crack will put everything on notice, as it's not a normal bush sound.
    Eat Meater likes this.

  12. #12
    Member Chur Bay's Avatar
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    Just walk around it. If you have to go through, don't fight it.
    If you want to cut a track,just cut one.A route that you will follow on a hunt.
    For cutting tracks a small set of Fiskars loppers is what you want. Trust me. I've cut a lot of tracks.
    Silky saw for bigger logs.
    Micky Duck likes this.

  13. #13
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    ++Secateurs and folding saw++
    Micky Duck likes this.

  14. #14
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    Secateurs and a folding silky

  15. #15
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    https://shop.farmlands.co.nz/secateu...1/5637172271.p
    Don’t piss around with cheap secateurs, there’s a reason people in horticulture use these or felco.
    nickbop likes this.

 

 

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