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Crimson Woodland Full-Tang Field Hunter - Red Wood

Price:

20.99


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Brush Country Full-Tang Field Knife - Red Wood

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/3547/image_1920?unique=ce17d8b

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This fixed blade hunting knife is built for real Texas field work. A full-tang clip point blade in 3Cr13 steel gives you steady control from camp chores to clean game processing. The polished edge meets a contoured red wood handle that locks into your grip without hot spots. Belt-ready nylon sheath keeps it close when you’re stepping out before first light. For the hunter who knows the difference between a good-looking knife and a working field knife, this one earns its keep.

20.99 20.99 USD 20.99

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Handle Length (inches)
  • Tang Type
  • Carry Method
  • Sheath/Holster

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 7.25
Overall Length (inches) 12
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 3CR13 Steel
Handle Finish Smooth
Handle Material Red Wood
Theme None
Handle Length (inches) 4.75
Tang Type Full Tang
Carry Method Belt
Sheath/Holster Nylon

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What This Fixed Blade Hunting Knife Really Is

The Brush Country Full-Tang Field Knife - Red Wood is a classic fixed blade hunting knife built the way Texas hunters actually use a blade: camp, trail, tailgate, and backstrap on ice. No springs, no buttons, no mystery mechanism. This is a straightforward hunting knife with a polished clip point and full-tang backbone, made for cutting, not showing off.

Where an automatic knife or switchblade snaps open with a spring, this knife stays ready by simply being on your belt. It doesn’t fold, it doesn’t fire, it just works. In a Texas deer lease, that fixed blade reliability often beats a pocket full of fancy mechanisms.

Fixed Blade Hunting Knife vs. Automatic and OTF Knives

Texas collectors know the difference between a fixed blade hunting knife, an automatic knife, and an OTF knife. This piece sits firmly in the first camp. The 7.25-inch polished clip point blade is anchored through the entire 4.75-inch red wood handle in a full-tang run. There’s no pivot, no button, and no out-the-front track to keep clean. You draw it from the sheath and it’s already at work.

An automatic knife, sometimes called a switchblade in everyday talk, uses a spring and button or lever to swing a folding blade out from the side. An OTF knife drives the blade straight out the front of the handle on rails. Both have their place in a Texas collection—fast access, pocket carry, mechanical interest—but when you’re dressing a hog or breaking down camp, a fixed blade hunting knife like this one is simpler, stronger, and easier to clean.

Mechanics of a Full-Tang Field Hunter

The mechanism story here is plain: there isn’t one. That’s the point. The strength comes from continuous steel, not from moving parts. The 3Cr13 stainless blade runs full-tang from tip to butt, pinned under contoured red wood scales with brass hardware. You can see the spine of the tang all along the top of the handle—old-school proof this is a working field knife, not a trick piece.

Clip Point Geometry for Texas Field Work

The long, polished clip point blade gives you a fine tip for careful cuts and plenty of belly for sweeping slices. On a Hill Country whitetail or a Panhandle hog, that profile lets you ease under hide without punching through organs, then roll into longer skinning strokes. It’s the same story at camp—feathering kindling, trimming cord, or slicing a backstrap at the grill.

Red Wood Grip and Field Control

The smooth red wood handle, broken up with a dark center section and brass pins, is shaped to sit naturally in the hand. The front guard and subtle contouring give your fingers a reference point when your hands are cold, wet, or gloved. Add the lanyard hole at the butt and you’ve got a fixed blade hunting knife that stays put whether you’re on a South Texas sendero or a West Texas rock outcrop.

Texas Carry Reality: Fixed Blade on Belt

In Texas, a fixed blade hunting knife like this rides best where it was meant to—on your belt, edge down and easy to reach. The included nylon sheath is light, simple, and ready for ranch wear. Whether you’re climbing into a blind, stepping off an ATV, or just checking fences, this kind of knife is faster to access than an OTF knife buried in a pocket.

Automatic knives and OTF knives shine for city and everyday carry in Texas, where a quick, one-handed opening from the pocket makes sense. But on a lease or at camp, the fixed blade hunting knife is still king. No pocket lint, no mechanism to gum up with blood, fat, or mesquite dust—just draw, cut, rinse, and keep going.

Texas Law Context for a Fixed Blade Hunting Knife

Texas law has eased up over the years on blade length and carry types, but understanding where this fixed blade fits still matters. This is not an automatic knife and not a switchblade—it’s a traditional fixed blade hunting knife with no spring-assisted or push-button deployment. For most adult Texans, that keeps it comfortably within the typical hunting and outdoor carry expectations.

Where automatic knives and OTF knives can trigger more questions—especially if someone calls every spring-driven blade a "switchblade"—this fixed blade hunting knife usually reads to law and landowners alike as what it is: a field tool. As always, Texans carrying around towns, schools, or certain restricted locations should know the current statutes and local rules, but for lease roads, private land, and camp use, this style is the long-accepted standard.

Collector Value: A Working Texas Field Hunter

For a Texas knife collector, not every piece has to be an automatic or OTF showpiece. A collection breathes better when it holds a few honest, full-tang field knives alongside the switchblades and spring-assisted folders. This fixed blade hunting knife brings that balance. It gives you a straightforward 3Cr13 blade that’s easy to keep sharp, a red wood handle with real visual warmth, and proportions that feel right in the hand.

Mechanically, it stands as a counterpoint to your more complex automatic knife builds. You can lay it on the table next to an OTF and a classic side-opening switchblade and walk someone through exactly why all three exist—and why a Texan who hunts should own each type for different days. That teaching value alone is worth a slot in a collector’s roll.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Fixed Blade Hunting Knives

How does a fixed blade hunting knife compare to an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade?

A fixed blade hunting knife like this doesn’t fold and doesn’t fire—it’s one solid piece of steel with a handle wrapped around it. An automatic knife uses a button and spring to swing a folding blade from the side, which some folks call a switchblade in everyday speech. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front on rails. For Texas hunters, the fixed blade wins on strength, cleaning, and control when you’re dressing game or working around camp, while automatics and OTF knives shine for fast pocket carry and one-handed city use.

Is carrying this fixed blade hunting knife legal in Texas?

This is a traditional fixed blade hunting knife, not an automatic knife or switchblade, and it doesn’t use any spring or button to deploy. Texas law has grown more permissive with blades, especially for adults, and this style of hunting knife is widely accepted on leases, ranches, and private land. That said, Texans should always check current statutes and pay attention to restricted locations or age-related rules. In general, this kind of field knife is exactly what most people expect to see on a Texas belt during hunting season.

Why choose this fixed blade over a folding or automatic hunting knife?

You choose this fixed blade hunting knife when you want simplicity, strength, and easy maintenance. No moving parts to fail, no pivot to trap fat and grit, and no deployment timing to worry about with cold hands and gloves. A Texas collector might carry an automatic knife or OTF knife in town, but when it’s time to actually quarter a deer, split a hog, or handle camp chores, this full-tang field knife is the one you reach for. It’s a working blade first and a good-looking piece second—and that’s the right order for real field work.

For the Texas buyer who knows the difference between a fixed blade hunting knife, an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a side-opening switchblade, this Brush Country Full-Tang Field Knife - Red Wood feels like home. It’s the blade you leave in the truck through dove season, deer season, and the long hot stretch in between—simple, honest steel and wood that remind you why you liked knives in the first place.