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Why Tomahawks are Useless for Bushcraft

Why Tomahawks are Useless for Bushcraft

3. June 2026 Widowulf Comments 0 Comment

The Tomahawk guys probably won’t love this, but let’s be honest: Tomahawks suck for bushcraft. I’ve had this one for years—it originally came coated in some tactical black paint, and don’t ask me why I bought it because I honestly don’t know.

On the other hand, I have my trusted Swedish axe. I bought it in Sweden over 20 or 25 years ago. Everyone knows the brand, and guess what? It still performs like a beast.

When you compare them side by side, the difference is clear. I’m a peaceful guy, but there is a fundamental distinction here: An axe is a tool for building a log cabin. A tomahawk is a weapon designed for entering someone else’s log cabin and beating the shit out of them.

One is for crafting; the other is for killing. And out in the woods, you need a tool, not a weapon.

1. Prepping Firewood (The Stuck Bastard)

A tomahawk is lightweight and has a very thin, narrow blade. If you try to split firewood with it, you’ll realize quickly that it is exhausting. Because it lacks weight, you have to force all the power into your downstroke. And because the blade is so narrow, the little bastard constantly gets stuck deep in the wood.

With a proper axe, the blade is broader, and you can just let the slightly heavier head do all the work for you. It takes way less effort, it doesn’t get stuck easily, and it blasts big chips out of the log.

2. Woodworking and Ergonomics

I love working with wood and shaping it, but trying to do fine carving with a tomahawk is terrible. When you try to choke up on the handle to get a precise grip, that fucking hammerhead is constantly in the way.

An axe allows you to grip right behind the head comfortably. It gives you the control you need to get a beautiful, smooth surface. You just can’t get that kind of precision with a tomahawk. (By the way, I love making my own leather axe covers, and a proper axe head just fits and feels right).

3. The Useless Hammerhead and Tactical Garbage

“Tactical” tomahawks are even worse. Look, I don’t see any logical need for a hammerhead out in the forest. Why? Because I don’t carry nails with me in the woods. If you need to drive a wooden tent peg into the ground, you can easily hit it with the flat back of a normal axe.

The Verdict

To its credit, after all the abuse, the tomahawk was still surprisingly sharp at the end. But as a bushcraft tool, it makes you quit out of frustration.

If you want to crush skulls, buy a tomahawk. If you want to actually survive, craft, and process wood efficiently in the forest without destroying your arms, stick to a real, traditional axe.

Axe wins. Period.

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Tonight, I’m clearing the workbench to show you some of my personal, handmade pieces crafted from antler, bronze, stone, and wood. 

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Grab a drink, sit back, and enjoy the showcase. 

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Grab a coffee, watch the fire, and let me know in the comments if your bug-out bag is prepared for a proper Sunday breakfast.

Var ek • Em ek • Verð ek.

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No sponsored hype, no textbook theories. Just a raw, honest look at what actually works for me around the camp and the workbench. 

Pour yourself a drink, grab your favorite blade, and join the conversation. 

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If you value honest tool reviews and traditional craft, feel free to subscribe. 

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"All good things are wild and free"

H. D. Thoreau

In this video, I’m back at the workbench crafting a small, traditional spice container out of a piece of red deer antler, complete with a handmade wooden lid. 

This isn't a flawless, over-edited tutorial. I’m showing you the raw process—including a piece that I completely messed up, because failures are just part of the craft. 

To make things worse, the flies in the workshop were absolutely relentless. It honestly felt like a scene straight out of the Prose Edda, where Loki transforms into a fly to sabotage the blacksmith brothers Sindri and Brokkr while they were forging Thor's hammer. 

Grab a cold drink, slow down, and enjoy the smell of carved antler and wood.

---
If you enjoy honest, unsponsored traditional craft videos without the modern hype, feel free to subscribe. 

#antlercraft #bushcraft #woodworking #traditionalcraft #edda #diy #honestcraft
Making a Spice Box from Antler (And why Loki sabotaged me)
Modified Mora Classic #moramonday #morakniv @KuukkeliBushcraft #bushcraft #knifecommunity
The Opinel is easily one of the most recognizable pocket knives in history. It’s cheap, it’s simple, and it has absolutely no tactical hype attached to it. It’s the Dacia Duster of the knife world.

In this video, I’m slowing down, making some fresh coffee, and having a simple breakfast while looking at why this little French icon divides the knife community so much. 

On one hand, you have an incredibly thin, carbon steel blade that cuts circles around most expensive bushcraft knives when it comes to food prep and fine carving. On the other hand, you have a handle that swells up when wet and a lock that is as low-tech as it gets. 

No gear-snobbery, no sponsored talk. Just a quiet morning, a sharp blade, and an honest review of a tool that costs less than a fast-food meal.

---
If you value traditional, simple tools and an honest look at gear, feel free to subscribe. 

#opinel #pocketknife #knifereview #bushcraft #slowliving #minimalism #honestcraft
Opinel: Genius Minimalist Tool or Just Cheap Wood?
Pour yourself a drink, light a pipe, and slow down with me. 

Tonight, there is no building, no carving, and no crafting. Instead, I’m raising a horn of Danish mead to all the craftsmen and women out there, and sharing some raw, unfiltered thoughts from the workbench. 

We need to talk about modern consumerism, the toxic pace of our society, and why making things with our own hands is so vital for our minds. I’m opening up about the heavy reality of depression, how we treat each other as human beings, and why finding a place to unplug is matter of survival. 

No filters, no scripts. Just honest talk, pipe smoke, and reflection. Skål.

---
If this talk resonates with your own journey or your mental health, feel free to subscribe. You are not alone in this.

#honesttalk #mentalhealth #consumerism #slowliving #craftsmanship #depression #stoic
Skål to the makers. Why we need to slow down and create.
Tonight, I’m clearing the workbench to show you some of my personal, handmade pieces crafted from antler, bronze, stone, and wood. 

Every single piece tells a story of patience, learning, and connection to the old ways. No mass production, no corporate factory lines—just honest craft made with basic tools on the yard. 

Grab a drink, sit back, and enjoy the showcase. 

---
In the next video, we will light the pipe, pour some Danish mead, and have a serious talk about modern consumerism and mental health. Subscribe so you don't miss it.

#handmade #craftsmanship #antlercarving #bronzecasting #slowliving #bushcraft #slöjd
Showcase: My handmade jewelry from antler, bronze & stone
Mora Classic Original #moramonday #moraofsweden #bushcraft #morakniv #morakknife
The modern outdoor scene is obsessed with titanium sporks, plastic water filters, and tactical survival tins. But let’s be honest: can you really call it "living in harmony with nature" if you eat your Sunday morning egg with a metal spoon from a factory? I don't think so.

In this video, I’m taking camp comfort to a historically accurate, completely uncompromised level. No plastic. No modern shortcuts. Just raw materials and traditional handcraft (Slöjd).

What I’m making for the perfect wilderness breakfast:
• The Egg Cup: Carved from a beautiful piece of pear wood. 
• The Spoon: Made from raw cow horn, heat-pressed. Horn is naturally non-reactive and chemical-free – far superior to silver or steel when it comes to the chemistry of a perfect egg yolk.
• The Salt Shaker: Crafted from a piece of deer antler, hollowed out and plugged with a handmade wooden stopper. Moisture-resistant and built to survive a bear attack.

Is it absolutely necessary to spend hours crafting a luxury egg set in the woods? Probably not. Is it better than anything you can buy in an outdoor shop? Absolutely. 

Grab a coffee, watch the fire, and let me know in the comments if your bug-out bag is prepared for a proper Sunday breakfast.

Var ek • Em ek • Verð ek.

---------------------------------------------------------------- For legal reasons: This video is for entertainment and traditional crafting purposes only. Don't eat your horn spoons.
Stop Buying Tactical Gear! Making the Ultimate Bushcraft Breakfast Set
The Helle Temagami and Casström Lars Fält are great knives, but they mostly just gather dust on my shelf now. Here is the honest truth why they lost their spot to a simple, traditional Puukko. 

Full, unsponsored review linked below.

#shorts #bushcraftknife #knifereview #helletemagami #casstrom #puukko #honestcraft
Why I stopped using these Bushcraft Icons... 🪓
The Helle Temagami and the Casström Lars Fält are easily two of the most celebrated bushcraft knives on the market. But honestly? I barely use them anymore. 

In this video, I’m putting these two icons side by side for a direct comparison, sharing my hands-on experience with their steel, ergonomics, and performance in the woods. But more importantly, I talk about why my preference has shifted away from these heavy-hitters and back to the simplicity of traditional Scandinavian Puukkos. 

No sponsored hype, no textbook theories. Just a raw, honest look at what actually works for me around the camp and the workbench. 

Pour yourself a drink, grab your favorite blade, and join the conversation. 

---
If you value honest tool reviews and traditional craft, feel free to subscribe. 

#bushcraftknife #helletemagami #casstrom #puukko #knifereview #scandigrind #honestcraft
Helle Temagami vs. Casström Lars Fält: Why I stopped using them.
Subscribe

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