You’re not just looking for a knife—you’re after something that’s got soul, grit, and a story you can feel in your bones. The Rough Ryder Stoneworx Sowbelly is that knife. This isn’t some flimsy, factory-stamped gimmick.
The sowbelly is a weighty tank at 7.37 ounces of pure, hand-crafted attitude, packing five 440A stainless steel blades into a sub 4-inch frame that sits in your grip like it was born there. Each blade, polished to a razor-sharp mirror finish, is a specialist—whether you’re gutting a fish, trimming a branch, or just cracking open a cold one with style. The match strike pull nail nicks give you that old-school snap, a little rebellion in every flick.
The handle is where it really shines though; this thing’s a stunner—red and blue turquoise mixed with yellow turquoise, mother of pearl and abalone seashell, all smashed together by hand into a cracked, crazy quilt of color. No two are the same, and that’s the point. It’s raw, it’s real, like the earth itself decided to show off. Nickel silver bolsters flash like they’re daring you to test it, and the brass liners keep it locked tight—solid as hell, hefty enough to mean business.
This Sowbelly’s for the guy who doesn’t just use a knife but lives with it—the one who’s got dirt under his nails, a fire going at camp, and a grin when the work’s done. Rough Ryder didn’t churn this out on an assembly line; they built it, piece by jagged piece, for the ones who get it. It’s not just a tool—it’s a partner. So, you in? Ready to sling this bad boy in your pocket and take on whatever’s next?