The Sami Knife - History and Use

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 28 авг 2024
  • Talking a bit about the history and how to use one of the best knives ever made.
    This knife was made by Knivsmed Strømeng:
    samekniv.no/

Комментарии • 60

  • @evenmattias
    @evenmattias 2 года назад +22

    "Nordic Bowie knife" best description I've heard yet

    • @jankopransky2551
      @jankopransky2551 Год назад +2

      If you take a look at the earliest bowie knife examples, you can see quite a lot of simmilarities in the overall design!

  • @imortaliz
    @imortaliz Год назад +16

    i have a 80 year old strømeng knife that was purchased by my great grandfather still going strong with the original blade

    • @Rootori4
      @Rootori4 6 месяцев назад +1

      Wow that is awesome, keep good care of it and oil the Handle :)

  • @SoldierDrew
    @SoldierDrew 19 дней назад

    The most perfect bushcraft, camping, survival knife design ever created.

  • @HankEvony
    @HankEvony 8 месяцев назад +2

    After owning a couple they are amazing, and the sharpness is incredible, and the one of a kind traditional feel is unbeatable

  • @johnmutton799
    @johnmutton799 28 дней назад +1

    They are ery good field knives. Great all rounder!

  • @jankopransky2551
    @jankopransky2551 Год назад +8

    With my small puukko, I find that flap at the end of the sheath usefull for grabing the sheath while I pull the knife out.

  • @keko4618
    @keko4618 Год назад +10

    30 years ago i lost my marttiini knife and still feel shamed. There is no forgiving to man who loses a knife.

    • @southernstacker7315
      @southernstacker7315 8 месяцев назад +3

      Maybe someone found it and it saved their life?

    • @gooldii1
      @gooldii1 4 месяца назад

      I was thinking the same.​@@southernstacker7315

  • @tumbleweed6658
    @tumbleweed6658 2 года назад +8

    One of the best reviews I've seen on the Sami Stromeng knife I been using the KS8 Old Fashion for a few years now and it goes with me on my back-packing and camping trips here in Colorado. Well done and thanks for sharing.

    • @evenmattias
      @evenmattias 2 года назад +1

      Personally I leant towards the KS8 special forces version. Serves me excellent for just about anything I need it for outdoors

  • @rumbidzai
    @rumbidzai Год назад +4

    Really appreciate this. Great presentation of how amazing of a wilderness tool this is. I'm Norwegian, but not Saami, but I've always greatly enjoyed and respected these knives in my outdoor activities. The only remark I have is that the fresh birch would have been cut through significantly faster with a sharper blade and more precise hits :)

  • @TingTingalingy
    @TingTingalingy Год назад +2

    I'm going to try making one of these.
    It's so beautiful, wonderful history.

  • @timgarec6240
    @timgarec6240 2 года назад +4

    I've owned this knife for years. This was a great review, very insightful.

  • @ROE1300
    @ROE1300 5 месяцев назад +3

    👍 Excellent review and history.

  • @steelhelmetstan7305
    @steelhelmetstan7305 2 года назад +3

    Great history of the knife and its uses by the people in your part of the world. I liked the outdoor footage where you show what the knife was used for in the Scandinavian forests....cheers and hello from the UK 🇬🇧 😀 😄

  • @Marcus_Shaw
    @Marcus_Shaw Год назад +3

    Very nice.
    I have several Finnish Marttiini which work well and are easy to sharpen and maintain, but if I get the opportunity to come to Norway again I will look out for one of these 👍

    • @HankEvony
      @HankEvony 8 месяцев назад

      I love my marttiinis almost too much to use but they are made to be used so i will it only adds character, and they are special enough to pay to put new edges on if need be in the future. Nothing like having a nice one of a kind knife

  • @CraftyCleetus
    @CraftyCleetus 2 года назад +2

    Excellent knife and history knowledge

  • @max_fjellstorm
    @max_fjellstorm 10 месяцев назад +2

    You Are very lucky with the wood on your knife! Mine looks like taken from a bromstick

  • @SheepDoggy68
    @SheepDoggy68 Год назад +3

    I couldn’t help but wonder if a looser style “machete “ grip would be useful with this knife. I grew up with a machete so allowing it to move in my hand so the blade is actually going faster than my arm with a bit of a flick (probably not the best choice of words, but it’s early and I’m still on my first mug of tea!) just before the blade impacts is a natural choice. Keeping a “death grip” on it also tends to speed up hotspots on your hand and transmit more vibration up your arm. You could use either grip you showed in a looser style stroke without loosing control of your blade!

    • @lalli8152
      @lalli8152 Год назад

      Yeah that is how i use big knives using the "leuku grip" he talked about where you only hold the knife from the pommel end. I dont grip it very tightly, and i just sort of flick the blade instead of going hard, and that flare thing in leukus pommel gives really secure grip even that way. The grip is just to extend, and give more leverage for the knife since they are still kinda short choppers for machete work. But also when i use the handle in conventional way i really kinda hold it loose mainly with thumb, and pointer finger

  • @alvmahn
    @alvmahn 2 года назад +2

    Having visited Scandanavia many decades ago, I recall being on a tour, and that one theory on the history of the knives is that they were possibly sourced through active trading.

    • @Thomachi
      @Thomachi  2 года назад

      Indeed, that is the most likely origin of these knives. But because of a lack of written sources it's hard to be 100% certain.

  • @azarashi_hieda
    @azarashi_hieda 18 дней назад

    I assume that the opening was designed to allow any moisture to evaporate, rather than trapped in scabbard. Seeing that the top is so tight

  • @joemorganeatmyshortschannel
    @joemorganeatmyshortschannel 2 года назад +1

    Love the knife I have a mora I love too that's really nice

  • @MrRugercat45
    @MrRugercat45 2 года назад +2

    Where did you get your Stromeng leuku, the handle is so beautiful! Most all I’ve ever seen are very plain birch. Yours looks older by the patina on the wood, but your birch is very nicely figured.

    • @Thomachi
      @Thomachi  2 года назад

      I got it as a gift many years ago, from someone who bought it directly at Strømeng's walk-in store in Karasjok.
      No idea why mine is like that, and I suspect it's just a very nice batch of birch they used.

  • @MrRugercat45
    @MrRugercat45 2 года назад +2

    Where did you get your Stromeng leuku? I’ve never seen one with birch that beautiful and it looks like it’s dyed darker too. I have three (a 9”, 5” and 8” and they all have plain handles. My 8” is an older on about 30-40 years old and it has a nice thick sheath.

    • @Thomachi
      @Thomachi  2 года назад

      Got it as a birthday gift, but it was bought directly at their walk-in store in Karasjok!
      I'm not exactly sure of there's any specific reason why mine has a darker handle, but it could just be that was the material they had at the time.

  • @Stargazer80able
    @Stargazer80able 2 года назад +1

    It is a very Viking type of blade. Is that an original Isak Strømeng? Very nice piece, rumour is that he made the blades in his first decades of manufacturing from big truck springs. They were a lot better quality than when he went commercial on his brand.

    • @Thomachi
      @Thomachi  2 года назад +1

      Thanks! This is most likely not made by Isak, as this knife came to me in 2008, 20 years after he retired. Still it's a very good knife, but it'd be cool to compare with an older example at some point.

    • @TingTingalingy
      @TingTingalingy Год назад

      Vehicle springs are hardly of superior quality steel. They greatly risk stress fractures as well.

  • @piotrpopiel8682
    @piotrpopiel8682 Год назад +1

    Do they make them little bit thicker? Perhaps like 4 mm ? 🤔 Great knife anyway. Thanks 👍🙂

    • @Thomachi
      @Thomachi  Год назад +1

      Don't think so. In my opinion having it thicker would make it overall less practical (Even if it would make it a better chopper)

  • @DaveWilson831
    @DaveWilson831 2 года назад

    this is a KS7 "Old Fashioned" with a blackened high carbon blade and tar-stained handle. The standard models are not stainless, they are also the same high carbon steel hardened to rockwell 59, just sold "In the white" so to speak.. no blackening or tar. My KS9 is that way.

  • @EngleVanISteen
    @EngleVanISteen Год назад +1

    Hei, veldig interesant. Angrer på at jeg ikke kjøpte en samekniv da jeg var i forsvaret. Men det er aldri for sent. Hvordan anorakk brukete du ute?

    • @Thomachi
      @Thomachi  Год назад +1

      Det er en reproduksjon av Britisk vindanorakk fra krigen dager. Finfin sak når kulda setter inn.

    • @EngleVanISteen
      @EngleVanISteen Год назад

      @@Thomachi ser beldig bra ut også. 😁 Merke?

    • @Thomachi
      @Thomachi  Год назад +1

      @@EngleVanISteen Silvermans! Der jeg kjøpte den

  • @MrRugercat45
    @MrRugercat45 Год назад

    How did you get such a beautiful handle on your Stromeng Leuku? I have several and they’re all very plain. Maybe because yours is older. I’ve always wanted an “Old Fashioned” 8” Leuku, but the older ones have much thicker sheath leather and it seems better quality birch too!

    • @Thomachi
      @Thomachi  Год назад +1

      The year may have something to do with it. I got this as a gift many years ago from someone who bought it at Strømengs walk-in store in Karasjok, and maybe they had a batch of particularly good birch handles.

  • @arkas6797
    @arkas6797 10 месяцев назад

    It's definitely a good knife but due to the size I can't imagine which of my activities (boar skinning, fishing, camping) it would be useful for.

  • @vitoscaletta7151
    @vitoscaletta7151 Год назад +1

    Who else is here after watching Sisu?

  • @norseman5041
    @norseman5041 Год назад

    the thang is not welded but struck ''Klink'' in the back holding the knife together.

  • @leemday5731
    @leemday5731 8 месяцев назад

    Viking knifes from Russia look very much like sami knifes right down to style of the sheath.

  • @ohfsir
    @ohfsir 2 года назад

    Har du pussa med og olja håndtaket på en old fashion eller er det en spesialbestilling med flammebjørkskaft?

    • @Thomachi
      @Thomachi  2 года назад

      Har ikke satt håndtaket inn med olje, men mulig det har mørknet over de snart 14 årene jeg har hatt den.
      Virker som den eksakte fargen varierer litt fra kniv til kniv med disse.

    • @ohfsir
      @ohfsir 2 года назад +1

      @@Thomachi Jo, de varierer vel litt, men har aldri sett en strømeng med så mye spill i treverket. De pleier å være helt uten "flammer" som eg har sett, slik øvre halvdel er på din. Og de som er "blånert" svarte, som din, har jo helt lyst grått skaft. Likte veldig godt looken med varm flammebjørk og sort blad på en strømeng :D

  • @claudioruiz4367
    @claudioruiz4367 2 года назад

    no hay tanto para mostrar y no mostró el encaste de la hoja con el cabo!!!

  • @arkas6797
    @arkas6797 6 месяцев назад

    Its sharpening makes the edge too fragile which is basically a useless knife especially at 3mm thickness.

  • @FarrahGerwing
    @FarrahGerwing 18 дней назад

    Looks almost identical to my Helle Lapplander?.....good knife

  • @southernstacker7315
    @southernstacker7315 8 месяцев назад +1

    Is that the knife SISU stuck through the Nazis head?

  • @sleeoo8758
    @sleeoo8758 Год назад +1

    It is called a Leuku.

    • @Thomachi
      @Thomachi  Год назад

      Same thing, different names

    • @historyouuu3495
      @historyouuu3495 2 месяца назад

      It's Leuku. " Saami knife" is BS.

  • @bradfarrahgerwing154
    @bradfarrahgerwing154 9 месяцев назад

    My helle lapplander is juet about identical

  • @childeater999
    @childeater999 22 дня назад

    we Saamis probably used maybe wood or reindeer horns to make our knifes