axesWhen most Americans traveled either by foot or by canoe, the most common and most practical sidearm and camp tool was the tomahawk. The preferred weapon of Native America caught on quickly among the European pioneers, and the combined demand created a massive influx of trade axes to the Americas. Some were of excellent quality and some were only created for profit, with hollow pipe stem handles and pipe bowls instead of polls. Few pipe axes kept the fragile bowl intact for long. The more practical forms of the one-hand axe proved best for work and for survival in the dense brush and virgin forests of the New World.

For campers, hunters and canoers today the hatchet or camp axe is still the sensible solution to many everyday problems. Tasks which would take hours with a belt knife take minutes with a good hatchet. Hunters of big game use the axe to cleave bone. Expert campers use axes to build emergency shelters, and chop and split firewood. Full sized axes may be better suited to farm work, but hatchets and tomahawks go anywhere — small enough to fit in the pack or lash to the bottom of a canoe seat.

Sporting axes today include another popular European import, the mountaineer’s ice axe, and military tomahawks which serve peaceful purposes equally well. The pipe axe also survives — today as in the old days usually a cheap souvenir.

Some of Our Favorite Axes

Our choice for the best axe is the Emerson CQC-T Tactical Tomahawk. It’s top quality, designed to handle anything from camp chores to combat.

Smith & Wesson’s Bullseye Hatchet provides an inexpensive alternative that’s still practical and reliable.

Cold Steel’s Throwing Tomahawk combines a functional hammer poll with an axe blade, and is tough enough for throwing practice.

See All of Our Axe Reviews Below


Axes

Petzl Ice Pick Axe, Classic Charlet Summit | Rubber Grip, Forged Stainless Steel

Only 19 ounces in weight, the 26-inch Petzl Summit offers full-size strength and a design with a few important improvements over...
JT Hats
41 sec read

Meyerco Machete Ax Review | Stainless Steel Fixed Blade

Machetes look like great fun in jungle movies, with everybody up front chopping away at six foot grass and sapling thickets...
Ken
45 sec read

Best Axe: Emerson CQC-T Tactical American Survival & Camping Tomahawk

Ernest Emerson, martial artist and knife maker, eventually came to regard the tomahawk as one of the essential survival tools for...
Ken
54 sec read

SOG Knives Fusion Tactical Tomahawk | Military Ax Review

In Vietnam, American Special Forces soldiers soon learned a lesson their ancestors knew very well–a tomahawk is better than a knife...
Ken
1 min read

United Cutlery Black Ronin Tomahawk | Full Tang Stainless Steel Throwing Ax

United Cutlery’s Black Ronin Tomahawk has enough points and sharp edges that no matter how bad you may be at throwing,...
Ken
52 sec read

Smith & Wesson Bullseye Hatchet | Stainless Steel Camping, Survival Ax

Smith & Wesson’s stainless steel Bullseye is an economical and reliable camp ax with a few odd points of styling that...
Ken
57 sec read

Russ Kommer Alaskan Canoe Hatchet | Stainless Steel Camping Ax by Timberline

One of the nice things about canoe camping is that you can take more than you could comfortably carry. Instead of...
Ken
53 sec read

Throwing Tomahawk | Cold Steel Axe | Rifleman’s Hawk Knife

Here we have another Cold Steel product that’s a fair value for what it offers. Do a search on functional tomahawks...
Ken
41 sec read

Condor Wilderness Tool Axe | Blasted Satin | Leather Sheath

Ever had the urge to own an axe that had a more “modern” feel to it? Then this is your utility...
Ken
30 sec read