UaVaj
Contributor
given everything is eventually going to be closed in the impending future.
need to start focusing on lionfish. they are abundant, nobody seriously shoot at them, they are an easy shot and they are great eating. just pain in the azz to harvest. (rather take a man of war tentacle wrap around over an actual lion fish injected sting any day - and twice on the weekends)
given that said. was considering xs fogcutter x (preferably the recon version) for the job. although quite expensive ($90). it would serve to combine both knife and shear. one less tool to carry.
the real question. 1) how does the fogcutter hold up to continuous lionfish spines cuttings. yes on the bigger 16" plus ones. any smaller and it is not worth the hassle. not interested in a bulky lionfish tube and shooting a bunch of 6" ones. 2) heard the rusting is pretty bad on these fogcutter due to cheaper stainless. that would question the durability of cutting bone/spines.
btw. a 420 stainless shear is $10.
need to start focusing on lionfish. they are abundant, nobody seriously shoot at them, they are an easy shot and they are great eating. just pain in the azz to harvest. (rather take a man of war tentacle wrap around over an actual lion fish injected sting any day - and twice on the weekends)
given that said. was considering xs fogcutter x (preferably the recon version) for the job. although quite expensive ($90). it would serve to combine both knife and shear. one less tool to carry.
the real question. 1) how does the fogcutter hold up to continuous lionfish spines cuttings. yes on the bigger 16" plus ones. any smaller and it is not worth the hassle. not interested in a bulky lionfish tube and shooting a bunch of 6" ones. 2) heard the rusting is pretty bad on these fogcutter due to cheaper stainless. that would question the durability of cutting bone/spines.
btw. a 420 stainless shear is $10.