OK, be specific on why it's not. I want to understand what your objection to this product is, if I agree or disagree with your objections
First off, it doesn't mater if you "agree or disagree" with my objections. As for the specifics:
When I made my first
gajewah-that's the Algonquin word for what is being called (improperly) an "Indian war club." I was taught that when I found the right bole root/branch, I was to speak with the tree, ask for its forgiveness, say the right prayers,something like
Standing person (that's what the Algonquian word for "tree" is, "standing people.")
we helped you out, once-remember? Now I need your help. Please allow me to borrow a piece of you-I promise that I'll try use your energy in ways that you find pleasing." then and only then would the limb be removed. Prayers are said while shaping the club, fire hardening it, smoothing it, reshaping it, rehardening it.
These are the things that make an "Indian war club." Not the shape, not the ball, but the prayers and ritual that surround its fashioning.....
And for many eastern woodlands tribes, it wasn't merely a "war club," but a symbol of manhood and authority, a tool for punishment and enforcement. It's also, often, much more than a "club," and more like a fire hardened wooden sword-it often has a sharp edge along the shaft, that can be directed against soft tissue or connecting tissues like tendons.The club fighting of Woodlands tribes and Cherokees (and others) were favorably compared to western fencing by European invaders....er, European
"settlers" in North America during the 16th and 17th century...before such things were thought to have been-and were, for the larger part-eradicated.
and why that means you have "much bad to say" about Thompson.
Peace favor your sword,
Kirk
Lynn Thompson is an insufferable blowhard.
Most of his company's products are ok. Servicable. Inexpensive replicas or reboots of older designs, and I largely have no complaints about a few of them... though some of them, like their sjambok, are largely..........stupid, like their "Indian war club," which isn't a war club, or Indian, and isn't even made of wood......hell, it's made of plastic....
in China.
And some of them are simply ripoffs of custom-makers designs, tooled for mass production and cheap sale.
His marketing methods are, largely, flamboyantly ludicrous.
As for Lynn Thompson himself-he's a good businessman. While his company has worked with several knife makers (I'm a knifemaker, remember?) he doesn't hesitate to say bad things about other makers and their products. I've seen him at more than a couple of Blade expos, and-while he's entitled to an opinion about their products, I've never thought much of people who need to run others down for their efforts in order to extol their own...as he has done...repeatedly....sure, I don't care for his marketing methods, either, but the man's an ***-a blowhard and a bully. I say that in spite of having friends, teachers and training partners who have been and are directly associated with him.
So, to sum up, the "
much bad to say":
-His advertisement videos
-His flagrant ripping off of designs that are characteristic of existing and still producing makers
-His crazy antics and flame wars against Michael Janich, Spyderco and Strider knives
-His marketing and expense of San Mai as a "quality" laminated steel
-His bad reputation for service and warranty claims (not something I've experienced, but when I break cheap ****, I'm more likely to go out and get more cheap **** than try to get my money back)
-
(I haven't covered all of this in detail, out of deference to your "discuss in an open forum" comment, so anyone who wants to can Google them, and see what I mean....but it's stuff like this:
Cold Steel? Mostly okay, but some products are merely ****, while others are insulting, like the "Indian War Club."
Lynn Thompson? Blowhard, bully, narcissist, and borderline psycho. The Thomas Edison of cutlery-and I don't mean that in an "invented the lightbulb" way, I mean in in an
electrocuted dogs and drove Tesla out of business and into poverty way.