Wanna see something cool? How about some Half/Chete’s from Woods Monkey! Media
Published: 3 hours ago
This isn’t a showpiece—it’s a go-places blade.
The Woods Monkey Half/Chete was built for dirt roads, bad weather, and long days behind the wheel of an old Land Rover headed somewhere questionable (in the best way). One tool. Zero excuses.
Clear trails when the path disappears.
Feather sticks and spark fires when the sun drops.
Prep food, split kindling, make camp, and keep moving.
The Half/Chete hits that perfect middle ground—big enough for light chopping, nimble enough for camp chores, and tough enough to be your only blade when you pack light and travel far. Field-sharpenable, no nonsense, and ready to work wherever you stop.
Removable scales mean you can strip it down, lash it to a pole, or re-wrap it with paracord for a true bush setup. Adapt it to the mission. Make it yours.
It rides in a JRE Industries fire hose dangler sheath, because gear should be as bombproof as the places you’re headed.
One knife. One vehicle. One adventure.
If you had to grab a single tool and point the Rover toward the horizon—this would be it.
The Woods Monkey Half/Chete was built for dirt roads, bad weather, and long days behind the wheel of an old Land Rover headed somewhere questionable (in the best way). One tool. Zero excuses.
Clear trails when the path disappears.
Feather sticks and spark fires when the sun drops.
Prep food, split kindling, make camp, and keep moving.
The Half/Chete hits that perfect middle ground—big enough for light chopping, nimble enough for camp chores, and tough enough to be your only blade when you pack light and travel far. Field-sharpenable, no nonsense, and ready to work wherever you stop.
Removable scales mean you can strip it down, lash it to a pole, or re-wrap it with paracord for a true bush setup. Adapt it to the mission. Make it yours.
It rides in a JRE Industries fire hose dangler sheath, because gear should be as bombproof as the places you’re headed.
One knife. One vehicle. One adventure.
If you had to grab a single tool and point the Rover toward the horizon—this would be it.