I have been putting off getting a battery put into my Victorinox Garrison watch for going on a year now. It's the cheapest Victorinox watch I found, and it also happened to be a watch Roush Fenway Racing gave to an employee. The rubber strap had been removed, and had been replaced with a cheap and flimsy woven band that fell apart in less than a year as my EDC watch. I wanted a NATO type band. My jeweler said that he'd have to special order a NATO-type band, and I asked him that if it would be OK if I just ordered one on my own; to which he agreed. Well, I finally remembered to do so.
And thanks to Jerry for helping me figure out the easiest way to deal with websites that use WEBP images (which I can't upload to most websites; despite the fact most smaller e-commerce retailers seem to use them these days) is to just take a screenshot and crop it down.
I chose black with green stitching, as it complemented the black dial/face with the green Roush logo. And black is more formal than olive-drab green, which was what was on the watch originally; and what I was originally gonna get.
And, some other stuff.
First of all, a knife made exclusively for CountyComm, whom I bought the knife from. Been curious about it for a long time--ever since it debuted in 2019. While they call it the "Stub", it is essentially the same as the Boker DW1, except it has a D2 Tool Steel blade (instead of AUS-8), titanium lock/frame and clip (instead of steel), and the handles are smooth G-10, in bright orange. It's 1 3/4 closed with a 1" blade. I was wondering if I could even do anything with it. It's made basically as a form of box cutter. I'm wearing it as a form of "neck knife" clipped to the neck of my shirt, so it won't hang like a fixed blade on a neck lanyard.
Plastic hemostats at $1 each, so I bought 4. I have metal surgical hemostats, that are great for clamping, yanking, and holding any small stuff. But, they leave tool marks on most plastics.

Maratac "mini trauma shears". While I assembled rather large first aid kits in tackleboxes for all the vehicles set up for "anything that can happen if I roll up on an accident scene" (mostly geared towards bleeding, but are soon to include clotting powder, SAM splints, and CPR shields) But, the little first aid kits I throw in my pack when working fences are more geared towards me getting cut when caught up in a thorn bush, or when I screw up and accidentally cut myself on barbed wire or working with my knife. The biggest is in an old BSA first aid tin from the '50s, and it really can't hold much. Most are the pocket-size Johnson & Johnson "travel" kits that are basically 5-6 Bandaids and two gauze pads--or usually 10-12 Bandaids and 4-5 gauze pads after I'm done. But, I may be better off building a bigger kit that hooks onto the MOLLE attachment of my pack, so that I'm ready for incidents involving chainsaws or hunting accidents. These scissors are for those smaller kits--I chose the glow in the dark version on the right.
