Backcountry Ridge Sawback Survival Knife - Wood Handle
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Cold mornings, wet tinder, and one tool that doesn’t flinch. The Backcountry Ridge Sawback Survival Knife delivers a 6-inch satin clip-point blade with a sawback spine and partial serrations for fast work on cord, branches, and camp chores. A full-tang build and warm wood handle keep control locked in, while the nylon belt sheath rides light and ready. Simple, dependable, and field-balanced at 10.5 inches for anyone who actually uses their survival knife.
Built for the Field, Not the Display Case
The Backcountry Ridge Sawback Survival Knife is what you grab when the weather turns, the fire won’t start, and you need a blade that just works. At 10.5 inches overall with a 6-inch working edge, it’s long enough to bite into branches and baton kindling, but compact enough to ride on your belt all day without feeling like a boat anchor.
This is classic survival knife DNA: full tang, sawback spine, partial serrations, and a warm wood handle that feels like it belongs in camp. No gimmicks, no mall-ninja styling—just a solid fixed blade tuned for real use outdoors.
Field-Ready Survival Knife for Serious Use
Everything about this fixed blade is built around real camp and backcountry tasks. The satin stainless steel blade shrugs off moisture and wipes clean easily. The clip-point profile gives you a fine tip for detail work—think notches, food prep, or gear repair—while the partial serrations near the handle tear through stubborn rope and webbing.
The sawback spine is more than just visual attitude. Those teeth give you extra bite on small branches, bark, and quick notching when you don’t want to drag a folding saw along. Paired with the straight cutting edge and serrated section, you’ve got three working zones on one blade.
Classic Materials, Honest Build Quality
Under the glossy wood scales, this is a true full-tang survival knife. The steel runs the full length of the handle, ending in a rounded metal pommel that can double as a light striker or improvisational hammer. That means strength from tip to butt—no hidden weak points, no mystery partial tang.
The wood handle brings a traditional look with real-world grip. The contoured shape fills the hand without hot spots, and the smooth finish still finds purchase thanks to the natural grain and subtle palm swell. Stainless steel guard and spacers lock your hand in behind the blade, giving you confidence when you’re pressing into tougher cuts.
Full-Tang Confidence from Spine to Pommel
A survival knife lives or dies on its tang. This one shows its backbone proudly—steel visible along the entire handle, capped by a rounded metal butt. Whether you’re batoning through small logs, tapping in stakes, or using the pommel for light impact work, that continuous steel core keeps the knife honest.
Sawback Spine and Partial Serrations for Versatile Cutting
The upper spine carries a row of sawback teeth for aggressive bite into bark and smaller branches, while the lower edge is split: plain edge toward the tip for clean slicing, and serrations near the guard for shredding through fibrous material. It’s a smart layout—you get control up front and raw power near the handle.
Balanced for Camp, Pack, and Trail
At 10.5 inches overall with a 6-inch blade and 4.5-inch handle, this survival knife hits that sweet mid-size zone: long enough to work, short enough to carry. The spine sits at roughly 0.1375 inches thick—stout enough for confidence, but not so overbuilt that it feels like a pry bar.
On the hip, the included nylon belt sheath keeps everything streamlined. Riveted at the tip and secured with a snap closure, it rides close to the body and doesn’t argue with pack straps. Pull, cut, re-sheath—it’s simple, which is exactly what you want when the light’s fading.
Nylon Sheath That Actually Works Outdoors
The black nylon sheath is built for real wear: belt carry, quick access, and enough structure to protect the blade without weighing you down. The reinforced tip helps resist punctures when you kneel or sit, and the snap strap locks the handle in when you’re moving fast or scrambling over terrain.
For the Camper, the Hunter, and the Everyday Outdoorsman
This isn’t a wall-hanger. It’s a survival knife for people who cut rope, split kindling, trim branches around camp, and want one tool that can handle a little abuse without crying about it. The stainless blade is low-maintenance; the wood handle gives it that timeless field look that doesn’t go out of style.
If you’re building a kit for hunting season, stocking a go-bag, or just want a dependable belt knife for camp weekends, the Backcountry Ridge Sawback Survival Knife slides into that role easily. It’s affordable, straightforward, and designed to be used hard without feeling fragile.
What Balisong Buyers Want to Know
Are butterfly knives legal to buy?
Even though this product is a fixed blade survival knife—not a balisong—it’s smart to know the general legal landscape if you also collect or carry butterfly knives. In the U.S., balisong and butterfly knife laws vary heavily by state and even by city:
- Generally more permissive states like Texas, Arizona, Utah, Florida, and Georgia tend to allow ownership and often carry of balisongs for adults.
- More restrictive states such as California, New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, and Hawaii may classify butterfly knives as switchblades or restricted weapons, limiting carry or even possession.
- Mixed or local-control states like Colorado, Pennsylvania, and Washington can have city or county rules that differ from statewide norms.
Laws change often, and local ordinances can be stricter than state law. Always check your current state and city statutes—or consult an attorney—before you buy, carry, or flip a butterfly knife. Fixed blade survival knives like this one can also have length and carry restrictions in certain areas.
What’s the difference between a butterfly knife trainer and a live blade?
In the balisong world, a trainer is built for flipping practice. It uses a dull or "blank" blade with no sharpened edge and often rounded corners. You still get the same handle geometry, balance, and flipping feel, but with dramatically reduced risk of cuts while learning new combos, ladders, and aerials.
A live blade butterfly knife is sharpened and meant for cutting, carry, or advanced flipping once fundamentals are locked in. Live blades demand tighter control and respect—missed catches and bad form can mean stitches.
This Backcountry Ridge Sawback Survival Knife is not a butterfly knife or trainer; it’s a fixed blade survival tool. But many knife enthusiasts cross over—training flips with a balisong, then grabbing a reliable fixed blade like this for camp and field use.
Is this butterfly knife good for learning to flip?
This particular model is a fixed blade survival knife, so it’s not designed for flipping at all—there are no rotating handles, pivot hardware, or latch system like a true balisong. If your goal is to learn butterfly knife flipping, you’ll want a dedicated balisong trainer with safe and bite handles, tuned pivots, and balance optimized for aerials and rollovers.
Where this survival knife fits in is the rest of your kit. Many balisong flippers also carry a practical fixed blade or folder for camp, trail, or everyday cutting tasks. The Backcountry Ridge Sawback Survival Knife fills that role: a dependable, full-tang outdoor blade to ride alongside the balisong in your collection or gear bag.
One Knife, Different Identities, Same Purpose
Whether you’re the collector who appreciates classic wood-and-steel survival silhouettes, the outdoors-focused user who just wants a trustworthy fixed blade on the belt, or the balisong flipper who spends the day training tricks and the night tending a campfire, this knife has a place in your lineup.
The Backcountry Ridge Sawback Survival Knife doesn’t pretend to be something it’s not. It’s a straightforward field companion: full tang, sawback spine, partial serrations, wood handle, nylon sheath. For the hunter, the camper, the prepper, and the knife enthusiast who actually uses their blades, it’s exactly what it looks like—a reliable tool ready for the next trip out.
| Blade Length (inches) | 6 |
| Overall Length (inches) | 10.5 |
| Blade Color | Silver |
| Blade Finish | Satin |
| Blade Style | Clip Point |
| Blade Edge | Partial-Serrated |
| Blade Material | Stainless Steel |
| Handle Finish | Gloss |
| Handle Material | Wood |
| Theme | None |
| Handle Length (inches) | 4.5 |
| Tang Type | Full Tang |
| Spine Thickness (inches) | 0.1375 |
| Pommel/Butt Cap | Rounded Pommel |
| Carry Method | Belt Carry |
| Sheath/Holster | Nylon Sheath |