Description:
The Gil Hibben Tundra Bushcraft Knife doesn’t mess around, it’s a fixed-blade brawler built to conquer the wild. That 4.63-inch drop-point blade, forged from 420HC stainless steel, slices like a predator’s claw—satin-finished, razor-sharp, and tough enough to shrug off rust while carving through wood or flesh with utter ease. At 9 5/8 inches overall, tipping the scales at 363 grams, it’s got a lean, mean heft—light enough to carry all day, sturdy enough to hack kindling or gut game without flinching.
The handle’s orange and black G10 Micarta—gritty, unyielding, gripping your hand like it’s daring you to drop it, even when soaked in rain or blood. Full tang runs through it, pinned with brass, making it a rock-solid tool that won’t snap under pressure. The stainless crossguard stands sentinel, keeping your fingers safe while adding a touch of raw style. Slipped into its black leather sheath—tough, belt-ready—it’s a package that screams readiness, begging to ride into the thick of it.
Crafted by Gil Hibben, a legend who knows the tundra’s bite, this knife isn’t for show—it’s for survival, for bushcraft, for claiming your place out there. Picture it splitting logs, skinning a buck, or just sitting proud on your belt—the orange G10 flashing against the black, a tool that’s as bold as it is brutal. It’s not here to sit pretty; it’s here to work, to prove itself in your hands. Grab it before it’s gone—this blade’s too alive to waste on a shelf.