A trip to the Stihl Dealership this morning.
PS10 Folding Saw; made in Japan. Pretty solidly built, and sharp teeth. $20; and much of an upgrade over the cheap Kobalt I use currently, and a bit bigger and more capable than the small Silky that is also used a lot, for green wood. Says for branches 2" and smaller--but I know firsthand it can cut up to 4" limbs if I need to and have nothing else. I like folding saws for woods walking, and jobs where a chainsaw is either overkill, or potentially unsafe (aka above my head, or in a tree); and they are usually quicker cutting, and more capable and effective than most saws on a knife, not only due to being bigger, but the pull-cut saws tend to cut more than the push/pull variety most knives have. Weird that it's got "PULL" printed in Spanish on the blade.
Stone River "Heavy Duty" Lockblade Knife; Chinese-made; $15. OK, I wanted a Stihl branded knife in my collection. There are German-made Richartz ones made many years ago, but people want stupid money for those things on the secondary market. Feels definitely like a $15 knife from anyone but Rough Rider; and it is sharp. Blade has smooth action, strong lock, and the handle material is pretty grippy due to the rubber (albeit, plastic is not nylon, but ABS). Sheath is pretty good, with a strong enough snap that shouldn't pop open if hooked on something. I think it will work OK, just not impressive; like a Rough Rider Folding Hunter (same price), Kabar Dozier (little more money) or the Buck 110LT (five dollars more). And the Buck is made in America. I'd love for Stihl to have the 110LT replace this thing--orange handle (as already used on them for Factory Specials and SMKW), Stihl logo etched on blade, black sheath with orange piping and orange steel logo. That would be how I'd do it. They already have the 285 Bantam (which I'm having my dealer order soon); but it's got a black handle; not orange.

New aggressive "Chipper" chain for the 35 year old 011AV, which is now mine; since my folks upgraded to an MS170 for the small saw (and both saws actually have the same bar and chain). Because it doesn't have that crappy Chinese carbeuretor that floods constantly, it's easy to start. For my own saw, I wanted a vintage Stihl with about a 15" or so bar made and assembled in Germany; but since we no longer have flea markets thanks to COVID, I'm gonna have to use this one for the time being. And besides, this is new enough to have such modern features as an automatic oiler and a chain brake.
And the MS170. It is built a LOT cheaper than my 011AV, but it doesn't weigh much at all, which means I can carry it if I have to walk. My folks bought it to replace the 011AV as the backup and small jobs saw.