Picked up a couple of axes from SMKW. All of these are Marble's. Another forum is doing a "Nessmuk Challenge" next month, and I am trying to be very period-correct as to the knives and axe I choose. Or at least close as I can get. Leathermans and SAKs will be something I'll try not to carry or use. I'm replacing that with a four-blade Remington Scout reproduction from 2011, as it is close to the knife of the '20s and '30s. I have an original, but it is a wreck with short blade, broken awl, and wobble on all tools.
#3 Safety Axe reproduction. Made in Canada. Plastic handles replace wood (or metal/Bakelite plastic on others I've seen), but otherwise very similar to the originals I cannot afford. The small bit should be good for small branches I need to lop off and/or get out of my way working, while being easy to carry. At 12 OAL" with a 2 5/8" by 4 1/2 bit, it's pretty small. Not something you'd fell trees with, but good for light pruning and small firewood for campfires. My only problem is "stainless steel head". Tool steel is really what an axe should be made of.

Firefighter's Survival Axe. Since the Woodsman's Pal, in design and price, ever since the company that made them was bought out, has become an overpriced $175 "bushcraft tool" instead of a reasonable ($50-75; depending on model) workingman's tool, I figured at $17, this was a more practical choice for something to carry with me in the woods to clear brush, and if I break it, can easily replace. It is a sort of thin-bladed (1/8) machete/brush axe/regular axe) combo that should do all I need in the woods. I'll use it for brush-clearing, lopping limbs off of trees before I saw them up with the chainsaw, and the pick end for moving logs. A sharpening stone is included, but given how a good small sharpening stone is half the price of the whole setup,I'm not expecting much. The only thing I'd wish they'd ditch is the hydrant wrench--unless your a career firefighter or on the VFD, you're not gonna ever use it! It just weakens the tool.