Bark River Knives owner Mike Stewart is once again diving into the history books for inspiration. Like with the Canoe, which debuted in July, Stewart found a classic design from the Marbles Knives catalog and gave it new life. The result is the brand new Bark River Ringtail, a narrow-handled knife with a stout blade made practical by the presence of a karambit-style finger ring.
The Ringtail is a reimagining of the Marbles Trout Knife, a pattern first introduced by the Michigan-based knife company in 1919 (shown below). The original Trout Knife was made with fly fishermen in mind, and had a simple but key innovation in its design: a ring at the butt end of the handle. Users could hook their pinky through the ring, or attached a cord to it, to keep the knife close by even when their hands were otherwise occupied.
Stewart made some noticeable modifications to the popular Trout Knife design when he drew up the Ringtail. The ring, which is centered on the original Marbles knife, is dropped and slightly off-center on the Ringtail. The Trout Knife had a thin, fillet knife-like blade, but the Ringtail has a more versatile 2.57” drop point blade shape. The steel has also been given a massive upgrade. The first run of Ringtails will be run in CPM-154, which Stewart says offers the best combination of toughness and corrosion resistance among today’s popular super steels.
The finger ring strongly resembles the ones found on many modern karambit-style fighting knife designs, but Stewart is clear to emphasize the Ringtail is not designed to be a tactical knife. “Most of what people call ‘tactical’ today is fairly useless,” Stewart says. “Real tactical knives are fairly rudimentary and stout, and made for a soldier to abuse.”
> > Keep your folders awesome. Grab a Pack of 5 Microfiber Blade Sleeves for $8.99 < <
Stewart says the Ringtail is intended to be an EDC fixed blade. “It’s a really nice neck knife,” he says. With a 2 oz. weight and an ambidextrous rare earth magnet sheath, the Ringtail can be carried easily under a shirt or on a belt. It also can serve as a low-profile hunting knife for those with the skill to use small knives for such tasks. “I would have no problem field-dressing a deer with this thing,” Stewart tells us.
Bark River says they are already pre-polishing the first batch of Ringtails. If you want to be the first to own one, KnivesShipFree confirmed the knives will hit their website sometime next week. The dealer is only a five-minute drive from the Bark River Shop in Escanaba, Michigan. The retail price is still to be determined.
Knife featured in image: Bark River Knives Ringtail
In the last five years, the knife making scene has absolutely exploded, with dozens upon dozens of new names, new talents, and new knives. One shop that gained a...
Hawk Knives delivered deeply sad news to the knife world yesterday: Grant Hawk, one of the most innovative, boundary-pushing knife makers of the 20th century, passed away earlier this...
The Kyle Lamb-designed Civivi SOKN must’ve been a hit, because it’s already getting a larger sequel called the MDRN. The MDRN is not just a simple upscale, as while...
Okay, now this is pretty cool: the August Buck of the Month has just landed and it, uh, marks the return of none other than the Buck 0830 Marksman....
Boker has dipped back into the traditional-inspired well for a new model called the Rusticus. This memorably-appellated EDC piece remixes some classic knife design elements into something that straddles...
Well well well, we’ve got back-to-back KA-BAR stories here at KnifeNews. Earlier this week we talked about the Les George-designed Cool Name Knife; today we’re taking a look at...
Les George has partnered up with KA-BAR for a new series of fixed blades, which they have dubbed the Cool Name line. The line syncs up perfectly with both...
©knifenews.com 2022
0 comments