Archive for the ‘Woodman’s Pal’ Category

North Carolina’s Mitchell Leonard’s 30-Year Love Affair with His Made-in-the-USA, Handcrafted Woodman’s Pal

Thursday, February 10th, 2011

Editor’s Note: Mitchell Leonard of Mooresville, North Carolina, went to a flea market 30-years ago and bought a Woodman’s Pal LC-14-B Jungle Fighting Knife. “I worked for the North Carolina Electric Cooperative,” Leonard says. “When I saw that tool, I knew it would be a really-good tool to use for clearing brush and cutting-down trees and limbs when we had ice storms in North Carolina that interfered with the power lines.” In this two-part series, Leonard will tell you why and how he’s been using his made-in-the-USA handcrafted Woodman’s Pal with its lifetime warranty for over 30 years.

Original Pro Tool LC-14-BQuestion: How do you use your well-balanced Woodman’s Pal , also known for its compactness?

Leonard: I use it to cut trees and brush off power lines. Yes, we do use chainsaws to clear away limbs and trees, but many times we have to walk a long way and cut and clear as we go to get all of the trees and the limbs off the power lines. A chainsaw is heavy and can run-out of gas and oil, and the blade can become dull. But the Woodman’s Pal is lightweight. I have a sheath, so I can carry it, leaving my hands free until I need it. It doesn’t run out of gas, it doesn’t get dull, and often it’s a much-more effective tool than a chainsaw when we have to walk long distances and cut trees and limbs as we go. I’ve used the Woodman’s Pal  to cut 5- to 6-inch-diameter poplar trees. Another advantage is that the Woodman’s Pal  doesn’t require maintenance. When I get through using it, I just put it in its sheath, and I’m ready to move-on to the next task. With a chainsaw, if I run out of gas, I’ve got to walk back to the truck, get the gas can, fill the chainsaw and then keep on cutting until it runs out of gas again. Then I have to return for the gas can, fill the chainsaw and start cutting once more. However, with the Woodman’s Pal , when I stop working, it stops working. Then when I’m ready to start working, it’s ready too.

Pro Tool Woodman's PalQuestion: As much cutting and chopping as you’re doing, how often do you have to sharpen your Woodman’s Pal ?

Leonard: Maybe 3-4 times a year. I’ve learned that the Woodman’s Pal works better when it’s not extremely sharp. I don’t know why this is, but if you’ve ever worked with an ax before, you know that an ax works better when it’s not extremely sharp. When an ax is too sharp, and you swing it into a tree, that sharp edge bites deep into the wood and can be difficult to retrieve. But when the blade’s not extremely sharp and cuts into the wood, you can get the ax head out and keep on working, allowing you to work faster and get more done in a day. I think this same principle is true of a Woodman’s Pal and that it works better, if it’s not extremely sharp. This reason is why you can continue to work with it for days, weeks and months before you have to stop and sharpen it. I don’t want a Woodman’s Pal that’s completely dull, but I have learned that it chops better if it’s not razor-sharp.

Question: How long did you use your first Woodman’s Pal  before it was worn-out? 

Pro Tool LC-14-BLeonard: My Woodman’s Pal  never wore-out. After 30 years of hard use, it’s still as efficient a tool as it was when I first bought it. Once I bought that old Woodman’s Pal  at the flea market, I started carrying it with me everywhere I went. There were very few times at work that I didn’t need it. I liked it so well that I had to have another one.

To learn more about the top-quality Woodman’s Pal, click here.

Using Pro Tool’s Woodman’s Pal to Eliminate Poisonous Plants and Places Where Biting Arachnids Live

Thursday, February 10th, 2011

Poisonous plant growing on a tree.This time of year outdoorsmen, hunters and landscapers will be clearing trees, cutting paths through the woods, cutting firewood, pruning trees and clearing brush from campsites with their tool of choice made in the USA – the Woodman’s Pal. But anytime you go into the woods or away from asphalt, more than likely you’ll encounter poisonous plants and biting arachnids. However, using the Woodman’s Palwith its lifetime warranty and money-back guarantee to clear land, roads in the backcountry and stream banks can help do away with the main causes of skin irritations and rashes – poison ivy, poison oak and poison sumac and eliminate many of the areas where biting arachnids live.

Although poison ivy, which grows across most of the Continental United States, with the exception of the Southwest, and poison oak have harmless appearances, they’re often difficult to distinguish from other plants because they tend to adopt the growth pattern of the plants that surround them. If they take root among tall shrubs, they’ll grow into shrubs and may resemble weeds, ivy leaves or oak leaves, but always grow their leaves in groups of threes. To identify these two plants, look for plants with three leaves branching from a single independent stem. Poison sumac, also known as swamp sumac and poison elder, mimics the plants growing nearby. Commonly found as a multi-branch bush, it may grow into a tree 25-feet tall, which a Woodman’s Pal can dispatch with ease. It has a complex, different leaf pattern with leaves that grow in pairs of 6 to 12 leaves on a reddish stem with a single leaf at the end. These leaves have smooth edges that end in a point. Poison sumac grows abundantly along the Mississippi River.
 
How to Prevent Reactions to Poisonous Plants:

Treatments for poison ivy and poison oak.If you plan to cut-down poisonous plants with your Woodman’s Pal, one of the best ways to prevent contact and possible irritation from these plants is to wear long-sleeved shirts, long pants and gloves, whether at home, clearing land or cutting shooting lanes or trails in the woods, preparing for hunting season. If you do brush-up against these plants, the FDA recommends that within the first 10 minutes of exposure to cleanse the exposed area with rubbing alcohol. Next wash the area with water but no soap, and then take a shower with soap and warm water. Lastly, put on gloves, and wipe-down everything you’ve had with you, including your shoes, clothes and handles of your tools with rubbing alcohol and water. However, if you wait more than 10 minutes to do these tasks after exposure to the poisonous plants, these precautions probably won’t work. Here’s a good site to learn more about how to treat poison oak, ivy and sumac, http://www.health911.com/poison-ivy-&-poison-oak

Poisonous Arachnids:

Working in the woodsYou also need to be aware of two critters when you’re using your Woodman’s Pal, redbugs and ticks. Use insect repellants with at least 10% to 30% DEET to turn these bugs away. Both ticks and redbugs live in forests on grassy lands and in low, damp areas often where vegetation is thick, like blackberry bushes, orchards, along stream and river banks. Too, you’ll find these arachnids in low vegetation like lawns, golf courses and parks. Of the two, redbugs are often the hardest to detect.  You may not know you’ve come in contact with them, until you spot red whelps that itch constantly on your ankles, waistbands and wrists.

To Eliminate Redbugs:

Two products will kill redbugs after you get them. Chigger Rid, an over-the-counter product you can buy at most drugstores, has a coating similar to fingernail polish but also has some type of ingredient in it to stop the itch. Many outdoorsmen paint their redbug bites with clear fingernail polish.

To Remove Ticks: 

Common tickTo properly remove a tick, use sharp pointed tweezers or specially-made tick tweezers to grasp the tick at its embedded mouth parts and as close to your skin as possible. If you squeeze the tick’s body or head, you risk pushing infected fluid from the tick into your body or leaving the tick’s head of mouth parts. Do not twist the tick, or turn the tweezers as you pull out the tick, but instead pull the tick straight out.  Don’t apply any substances to the tick before removing it – no alcohol, nail polish, petroleum jelly or other ointments. Don’t try to burn the tick out. Once you get the tick, put it in a dry jar with a lid or in a Ziploc bag. Save it in the freezer for later identification, if necessary. After the tick has been removed, wash the area of the tick bite with plenty of warm water and a mild dishwashing soap such as Ivory. Be sure to wash your hands well with soap and water also. Then use an antibiotic such as Polysporin or Bacitracin, and put a bandage on it. If you can’t remove a tick, call your doctor.

Use Your Woodman’s Pal for Yard Work

Friday, January 28th, 2011

J. Wayne Fears is an outdoor writer, book author and avid outdoorsman. He uses his Woodsman’s Pal while in the woods, but he also uses the same Woodsman’s Pal to do yard work around his home. You can too! Watch the video to see the many uses for the Woodsman’s Pal around your home. [...]

Pulling Down Vines-Woodman’s Pal

Friday, January 28th, 2011

The best way to pull down vines and clear your path is with the Woodsman’s Pal from Pro Tool Industries. Outdoor writer J. Wayne Fears explains why the Woodsman’s Pal is the tool of choice for pulling down vines. Check out the video! [...]

Features of the Woodsman’s Pal with J. Wayne Fears

Friday, January 28th, 2011

One of the nation’s best-known outdoorsmen and widely read author, J. Wayne Fears tells the features he likes most about the Woodsman’s Pal from Pro Tool Industries. Watch the video now![...]