Showing posts with label Outdoors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Outdoors. Show all posts

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Ka-Bar ZK-Pestilence Chopper Knife Lightning Review: Murders Plants and Zombies [Outdoors]

Ka-Bar ZK-Pestilence Chopper Knife Lightning Review: Murders Plants and ZombiesHonestly, I was expecting a blade marketed for use in zombie killing—seriously, that's what the ZK stands for—to be just a flimsy toy built more for show than for actual work. Boy, was I wrong.

It's got solid heft, for only weighing about a pound. The blade is front-weighted, heavier at the tip than at the handle, which helps it accelerate on the downswing. Not that you really need it on account of the knife's ludicrous sharpness. Seriously, with just a flick of the wrist, I can dismantle a 4-inch-diameter jade plant. Using a full swing, I cleared 15-yards of blackberry patch in a quarter of the time it normally takes me with shears and a weed-whacker.

The Pestilence is definitely a one-trick pony—excellent at clearing brush and overgrowth but not really anything else. The 10 1/4-inch blade is too long to let you use it as a hunting knife (and too heavy for backpacking) but not quite long enough to use it as a true machete. Nor does it have the necessary weight to split logs so it really limits you to soft, non-woody plants.

An excellent tool when faced with the challenges of clearing overgrown hedgerows and decapitating the walking dead alike.

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Thursday, September 15, 2011

Fall Out of This Amphibious Trailer on Your Next Vacation [Outdoors]

Fall Out of This Amphibious Trailer on Your Next VacationBecause nothing says relaxation like sitting in a white bubble in the middle of a lake, the Sealander amphibious camping trailer combines the awkwardness of hauling a trailer with the potential water crisis of tipping over in a lake.

The German-designed amphibious camping trailer features double-sealed air chambers and a bowl-shaped bottom to keep the "boat" afloat. Thanks to the shallow undercarriage, the trailer can be set a drift from any shoreline with adequate clearance without the use of a boat launch. Navigate the lake with an electric outboard engine while basking in the sun by removing the escape hatch trailer's roof.

The Sealander's interior can be arranged to accommodate campers sitting, or lying down and staring up at the stars. Modules are situated at the front of the trailer and include a fully-equipped kitchen, heater, and cooler.

The Sealander is expected to arrive in 2012 and will set camper/sailors back about $20,000. [Sealander via Oh Gizmo!]

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