DAY 36
This week's theme:
STRICTLY STAG.
I don't know about you guys, but this week I'm going ALL IN with STAG, OH YEAH! Definitely one of my top three favorite knife handle materials (the other two being any kind of Ivory and, with the exception of man-made synthetics, whatever I'm holding in my hand at the moment!); STAG has always fascinated me.
Truth be told, I can never have enough STAG. Although, as we shall see this week, not all STAG is created equal...which, when you think about it, is actually a significant aspect of the allure of STAG: it can be as individual and unique as a fingerprint, or as plain and uninteresting as a sheet of plywood. This week, however, I think I'll be selecting the "fingerprint" style STAG to show from my Mini Trapper collection.
So, here I sit, perusing a pile of STAG handled Mini Trappers trying to decide which ones to display and which ones to save for later since the Mini Trap
PER DIEM rules are explicitly clear on the showing of only one knife per day. Which ones will make the cut and why? To my eyes, they're all beautiful and deserve to be shown. If I were Gary Zinn, I'm sure I could write a three-page article extolling the individual attributes, advantages and aesthetic value of each and every one of them (and maybe someday I will, Tom

). But, when it comes to STAG, it's much like any other piece of fine art: each piece of STAG has its own voice and speaks for itself, you either "get it", i.e., hear it speaking to you, or you don't...it's really that simple.
I will, however, offer some (limited) commentary on the knives I have chosen to show simply because, right or wrong, I suspect there just may be other knife collectors out there reading this who may find my reasons of some (limited) interest. Either that or they find my comments mildly amusing and quite possibly even outright ridiculous...but that's a risk I'm willing to take.
So, here it is then, my first STAG Mini Trap
PER DIEM offering of the
STRICTLY STAG Theme Of The Week:
The reason I chose this particular knife should be obvious to any AAPK members who have received and read the book
Knives Of The Hudson Valley, written by AAPK member Richard Langston and generously gifted to AAPK Gold Level supporting members by site owner and man of mystery: the imitable, inscrutable and infinitely ingenious BRYAN. So, for that reason, it seemed coincidentally apropos.
~Q~