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Tiger Ridge Full-Tang Skinning Knife - Pakkawood

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6.26


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Ridge Country Full-Tang Skinning Knife - Black Pakkawood

https://www.texasbrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/3417/image_1920?unique=e76d056

4 sold in last 24 hours

Texas brass knuckles may headline the law change, but Texas buyers still judge a blade by how it works in the field. The Ridge Country Full-Tang Skinning Knife runs a 5.25-inch drop point, 9.625 inches overall, with steel you can lean on and a glossy black Pakkawood handle that settles into your palm. At just over six ounces with a belt-loop leather sheath, it rides light, cuts clean, and feels like the knife that’s already earned its spot on your Texas lease.

6.26 6.26 USD 6.26

FX203204

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Texas Brass Knuckles, Texas Blades, and the Ridge Country Skinner

Texas brass knuckles went from contraband to conversation piece in 2019 when the Legislature pulled them out of the prohibited weapons list. Since then, Texans who follow the law closely have treated that change as a green light for collecting: brass, blades, and the kind of gear that fits our own state’s rules, not anyone else’s. The Ridge Country Full-Tang Skinning Knife sits in that same lane — a straightforward working knife built for Texas lease country and ranch ground, no apologies, no gimmicks.

Texas Brass Knuckles Legal Shift and the Collector Mindset

When Texas revised Penal Code 46.01 and related sections in 2019, it did more than just make brass knuckles legal in Texas. It signaled that the state trusts adults to own traditional force multipliers and working tools without treating them like a crime in search of a defendant. That same mindset runs through serious Texas knife buyers. You read the law yourself. You know where the line is. What you want now is gear that respects your intelligence — solid steel, honest materials, and designs that belong in Texas hands.

This Ridge Country skinner is cut from that cloth. No fantasy shapes, no hollow tang, no plastic scales. Just a drop point blade that knows what it’s for and a handle that feels like it’s been in the truck for years already.

Full-Tang Confidence: Build Quality for Texas Ground

A Texas hunting knife lives hard. Lease caliche, mesquite thorns, early teal to late whitetail — if it can’t hang, it doesn’t last a season. The Ridge Country Full-Tang Skinning Knife is built to take that rotation without flinching:

  • Full-tang steel construction: one continuous piece of steel from tip to pommel, so when you twist through bone or joint, the knife stays solid.
  • 5.25-inch drop point blade: long enough for clean field dressing, compact enough for tight work along bone and hide.
  • Matte silver finish: reduces glare under headlights or a red lens, keeps things practical and low-profile.
  • 9.625 inches overall, 6.28 oz: that balance where the knife feels present in the hand without dragging on the belt all day.

Texas brass knuckles collectors talk about weight, feel, and control; knife buyers do the same. This blade carries like it was measured against a belt and a tailgate, not a display case.

Pakkawood and Leather: Materials Texas Buyers Still Respect

Plastic scales may be cheap. Texas buyers aren’t. The Ridge Country’s glossy black Pakkawood handle answers that clearly. Pakkawood is wood stabilized with resin — it holds shape in Gulf humidity, Panhandle cold snaps, and Hill Country dust without swelling and shrinking like untreated hardwood. The result is a handle that stays tight on the tang and feels warm and sure in the palm.

  • Glossy black Pakkawood scales: pinned over the tang, giving you a smooth, contoured grip with real substance under the fingers.
  • Metal guard and pommel: give you a hard stop for your hand and a finished, traditional profile that fits a leather rig.
  • Textured black leather sheath: built with a belt loop and snap strap so the knife rides high, secure, and quiet on your hip.

This is the same material logic that runs through quality Texas brass knuckles — no pot metal, no flimsy joints, just honest density where it matters. Wood, leather, steel. Texas basics.

Texas Brass Knuckles Law, Texas Carry Culture, Texas Knives

Once brass knuckles became legal in Texas in 2019, the conversation shifted from “Can I own this?” to “Is it worth owning?” Texas knife buyers have been there for years. Ownership isn’t the question; quality is. Whether you’re walking into a Hill Country feed store or a Panhandle gun show, you’ll hear the same talk: steel, edge, handle, sheath, and how it rides.

Texas Field Carry: Belt, Truck, and Lease

The Ridge Country Full-Tang Skinning Knife is built for that carry pattern. The leather sheath’s belt loop keeps it where a Texas hunter expects it: on the strong side hip, just forward of the seam. The snap strap closes over the handle, so pushing through cedar or mesquite doesn’t shake the knife loose. When it’s not on your belt, it sits easy in a console or door pocket — ready when the sun goes down and the work starts behind the barn or at the skinning rack.

From Legal Confidence to Collector Discipline

Texans who buy brass knuckles legally and on purpose tend to buy knives the same way: they read the statute, they know where they stand, and then they apply that same discipline to build quality. They look at tang type, grind, sheath stitching, and how the handle fits their hand. The Ridge Country skinner passes that inspection with simple details: full-tang steel, clean drop point profile, and a sheath that looks like it belongs on a working ranch belt, not a costume.

Texas Brass Knuckles: What Buyers Need to Know

Are brass knuckles legal in Texas?

Yes. Brass knuckles became legal in Texas in September 2019, when the Legislature removed them from the prohibited weapons list in the Penal Code. That change opened the door for Texas brass knuckles to move from back-room curiosities into the same open, lawful collector space as knives, tomahawks, and other traditional tools. If you’re reading this, you probably already know that — and you’re looking for sellers who respect that Texas-specific legal reality.

Can I carry brass knuckles in Texas?

Under current Texas law, owning and carrying brass knuckles is legal, but context always matters. Texas treats them like other lawful weapons: private property, home, vehicle, and ranch carry are straightforward. In public, common sense and location still apply — schools and certain secure facilities remain sensitive regardless of the item. The key for a Texas brass knuckles buyer is simple: you’re no longer a criminal for owning them. You decide how to carry responsibly, the same way you already do with your knives.

What are the best brass knuckles to buy in Texas?

The best Texas brass knuckles match the same standards serious knife buyers use. Solid metal, not cast junk. Clean machining, no sharp hotspots where you don’t want them. Weight that feels like control, not fatigue. And a design that fits your hand the way a good skinner fits your grip. Texas collectors often pair a favorite set of brass knuckles with a go-to fixed blade — a piece like the Ridge Country Full-Tang Skinning Knife — and judge both by the same rule: if it doesn’t feel right the second you pick it up, it doesn’t earn a place in the kit.

Texas Collector Identity and the Ridge Country Edge

Texas brass knuckles buyers and Texas knife buyers share one trait: they don’t like being talked down to. They already know what’s legal in Texas. They know exactly when Penal Code 46.01 changed. What they want now are tools and weapons that match that hard-earned confidence. The Ridge Country Full-Tang Skinning Knife does its part — full-tang steel, Pakkawood, leather, built for work more than talk. It’s the kind of knife a Texas collector keeps next to the legal brass knuckles in the safe, not because it’s flashy, but because it’s the one that gets used.

If you’re building out a Texas brass knuckles and blade collection that reflects this state’s law and culture, this skinner belongs in that conversation: a quiet, capable fixed blade that speaks the same language you do.

Blade Length (inches) 5.25
Overall Length (inches) 9.625
Weight (oz.) 6.28
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Pakkawood
Theme None
Handle Length (inches) 4.375
Tang Type Full Tang
Pommel/Butt Cap Metal
Carry Method Belt Loop
Sheath/Holster Leather Sheath