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Harvest Bone Field-Pro Fixed Blade Hunting Knife - White & Yellow Bovine

Price:

23.99


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Harvest Lineage Field Fixed Blade Hunting Knife - White & Yellow Bone

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/5991/image_1920?unique=bff8691

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This fixed blade hunting knife is built for real Texas field work, not glass shelves. A 7-inch polished stainless drop point rides on a full tang, balanced by a white-and-yellow bovine bone handle that locks into the hand when it’s cold, wet, or bloody. At 12 inches overall with a leather sheath for quiet belt carry, it’s made for deer leases, camp chores, and steady use season after season—the kind of field knife that ends up in family stories.

23.99 23.99 USD 23.99

BC882WYW

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

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Blade Length (inches) 7
Overall Length (inches) 12
Weight (oz.) 14
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Bovine Bone
Theme None
Handle Length (inches) 5
Tang Type Full
Carry Method Sheath
Sheath/Holster Leather

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What This Fixed Blade Hunting Knife Really Is

This is a true fixed blade hunting knife, built the old-fashioned way: full tang steel, honest drop point, and bone over leather, not plastic over mystery metal. No automatic knife tricks, no OTF knife gimmicks, no switchblade drama—just a steady 7-inch blade that does what Texas hunters expect it to do every time you reach for it.

At 12 inches overall, this fixed blade hunting knife is sized for real field dressing and camp work, not desk duty. The polished stainless steel drop point gives you belly for skinning and a strong tip for controlled cuts. The white and yellow bovine bone handle isn’t just pretty—it’s contoured for a confident grip when your hands are cold, wet, or slick from a successful hunt.

Fixed Blade Hunting Knife vs. Automatic, OTF, and Switchblade

Texas collectors know the difference between a fixed blade hunting knife and any kind of automatic knife. This piece doesn’t deploy—it’s already there, full tang from guard to pommel, ready as soon as it clears the leather sheath. Where an automatic knife snaps open with a spring and an OTF knife rides a track in and out of the handle, this fixed blade just shows up and goes to work.

A switchblade is a type of automatic knife that opens from the side with a button or lever. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front. Both are about fast deployment. This fixed blade hunting knife is about steady control: no moving parts, no lock to fail, nothing to gum up when dust, blood, or fat get involved. That simplicity is exactly why serious Texas hunters still keep a fixed blade on the belt even if they carry an automatic or OTF in the pocket.

Mechanics of a Traditional Fixed Blade Hunting Knife

Full Tang Strength You Can See

The heart of this fixed blade hunting knife is its full tang construction. The stainless blade steel runs as a single piece through the entire handle, with white and yellow bovine bone scales pinned on both sides. There’s no hinge, no pivot, no internal spring like you’d find in an automatic knife or switchblade—just solid, continuous steel. Texas hunters who dress their own deer and hogs will feel the difference in control and leverage right away.

That full tang, combined with the pronounced guard and flared butt, lets you bear down without worrying about the knife folding or shifting. Where an OTF knife is engineered for compact carry and quick access, this fixed blade hunting knife is engineered for torque, push cuts, and careful tip work along joints and bone.

Drop Point Geometry for Real Field Work

The polished drop point blade gives you a straight spine that runs out to a strong, controllable tip. The gentle belly through the lower edge is tuned for skinning and long, sweeping cuts. It’s a field blade first, not a tactical spear point, not a double-edged OTF profile, and not a narrow switchblade stabber. The grind and length are made for whitetail, hogs, camp rope, and firewood kindling, not for show.

Texas Carry, Camp Use, and Quiet Practicality

In Texas, a fixed blade hunting knife like this rides best where it belongs: on the belt, in the truck, or on the deer lease. The leather sheath with snap strap and belt loop keeps it quiet and close, whether you’re stepping down from a stand, climbing into a side-by-side, or working around the fire. There’s no clip, no pocket bulge, and no need to dig for a button like you would with an automatic knife or OTF knife.

Modern Texas carry laws are far friendlier than they used to be with larger blades, automatic knives, and even switchblades, but a traditional fixed blade hunting knife still draws the least attention. Around camp and country, nobody blinks at bone-handled steel in a leather sheath. It reads "hunter" and "working Texan," not "trying to show off a switchblade." For many buyers, that quiet respect is the point.

Collector Value: Bone, Leather, and Heritage Style

Why This Fixed Blade Belongs in a Texas Collection

Collectors across Texas already own their favorite automatic knife, an OTF knife or two, and maybe a classic switchblade for the drawer. This fixed blade hunting knife fills a different slot: the heritage field piece with natural materials and proven lines. The segmented white and yellow bovine bone handle, the mosaic pin, and the polished stainless blade give it a look that feels right at home next to vintage Westerns and old Schrade hunters.

Unlike many modern tactical designs, this knife doesn’t shout. It looks like it could have come off a ranch workbench thirty years ago and gone straight into the pasture. That’s exactly why serious Texas collectors keep knives like this alongside the more mechanical marvels. It tells a different story—one of seasons, camps, and hunts—rather than button-press theatrics.

Built to Be Used, Not Just Admired

Some switchblades and OTF knives in a collection never see anything tougher than an envelope. This fixed blade hunting knife is built for the other end of the spectrum: quartering a hog at the lease, cleaning a buck in fading light, or cutting rope and saplings around a Hill Country camp. The polished stainless is easy to clean when you’re working in blood or fat, and the leather sheath protects the edge and your gear alike.

The lanyard hole at the butt lets you tie a thong for extra retention—handy when you’re leaning over a creek bank or working from a stand. It’s a small touch, but it shows this fixed blade was designed with real field use in mind, not just catalog photos.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Fixed Blade Hunting Knives

Is a fixed blade hunting knife like this the same as an automatic, OTF, or switchblade?

No. A fixed blade hunting knife is the opposite of an automatic knife or OTF knife when it comes to mechanics. There is no deployment mechanism at all—the blade is permanently fixed in the open position with a full tang handle. An automatic knife or switchblade uses a spring and release to open from the side, and an OTF knife uses an internal track to fire the blade straight out the front. This fixed blade doesn’t fold, doesn’t fire, and doesn’t lock—it’s simply always ready once drawn from the sheath.

Are fixed blade hunting knives legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law is far more permissive now than it used to be, but you should always check current statutes and local restrictions. As of recent updates, larger fixed blade hunting knives, automatic knives, and even switchblades are generally legal in much of Texas, with special rules around certain locations like schools, courthouses, and some events. Many Texas hunters and collectors prefer a classic fixed blade hunting knife like this for truck, ranch, and deer lease use because it’s clearly a tool and traditionally accepted around camp and country.

Why choose this fixed blade if I already own a good automatic or OTF?

Because an automatic knife or OTF knife excels at quick, one-handed pocket use, while a fixed blade hunting knife like this excels once the real work starts. When you’re elbow-deep in a whitetail or breaking down a hog, you don’t need a button, you need leverage, control, and a handle that stays secure when things get slick. This bone-handled, full tang fixed blade brings that kind of confidence. For a serious Texas collector, owning all three—automatic, OTF, and a solid fixed blade hunting knife—means you’re covered from pocket chores to full field dressing.

In the end, this fixed blade hunting knife is for the Texan who knows exactly what they’re carrying and why. You can keep your favorite automatic knife in the pocket, maybe an OTF or switchblade in the drawer for when friends come by. But when the truck gate drops and the cool front hits the pasture, this is the knife that rides on your belt. Bone, leather, polished steel, and a design that’s been earning its keep in Texas for generations—that’s the kind of blade a collector doesn’t have to explain.