KNIFE MATERIAL
Bushcraft knife with a long full-tang blade in Swedish stainless steel
Included accessories: Leather Sheath
Garberg Grand (S) is a large bushcraft knife with a full-tang blade made of Swedish stainless steel. It's developed for advanced bushcraft and tough wilderness use, where the longer blade adds strength for heavy-duty work like felling small trees.
Garberg Grand (S) is a large survival knife featuring a 142 mm long and 3.2 mm thick blade in Swedish stainless steel. The full-tang blade is well-balanced and extends through the handle, with an exposed rear tang for batoning, scraping, or striking a fire starter. The ground spine is ferro rod compatible, and the knife comes with a leather sheath.
The extended blade makes Garberg Grand (S) strong enough to fell small trees. It handles demanding tasks such as splitting wood, carving, cutting branches, and building shelter. A reliable survival tool for bushcraft and wilderness expeditions.
The dark brown handle is ergonomically shaped with a Dala-pattern friction grip and finger guard, ensuring a firm grip in any weather. The knife comes with a vegetable-tanned European leather sheath in matching brown, equipped with a practical belt loop.
The blade is made of Swedish stainless steel (14C28N), 3.2 mm thick and hardened to 58 HRC. It offers excellent edge retention, corrosion resistance, and low maintenance. The Scandi grind provides cutting strength and control and is easy to resharpen in the field.
Garberg is named after a fäbod near Mora – a place shaped by strength, self-sufficiency, and life in harmony with nature. Garberg Grand (S) is made in our knife factory in Mora, Sweden, with over 130 years of knife-making tradition.
Our products are intended for both hobby and professional use within cooking, outdoor activities, hunting, craft, woodcarving, and more. Please read this manual carefully before use. Improper use may lead to injury.
KNIFE MATERIAL
Garberg is the only wilderness knife you need. These powerful, fire starter-compatible full-tang knives handle tough tasks like batoning, carving, and building shelter. It's named after the fäbod Garberg near Mora – a place shaped by strength, self-sufficiency, and life in harmony with nature.