Using
At the beginning I have wanted to de-
scribe the Salvator as a typical slasher – an
orca slayer or a corsair weapon. Waving with a knife of
this type and frenetic cutting of all what appears around: from
bottles with water to dry tree branches gives a lot of pleasure.
The 6mm edge with a high flat cut easily slices sticks, card-
boards, cans and pieces of lines, generating a real confetti fly-
ing around the snippets. Ant it is not an end of the fun which
is ensured by the Salvator to its user. An unhealthy paleness
of the postman who opens an envelope with it, neighbors who
stumble over the doormats while greeted with restless whis-
per in the corridor while having a hand supported by the eb-
ony hand. Frightened glances thrown furtively over the store
shelves while the Salvator cuts out six-packs – you even regret
that you have no gold tooth with you could make ominously a
brilliant show in the light of the supermarket fluorescent lamps.
Having satisfied a childish need of the innocent plays, I have
begun real tests of the knife supplied by Sullit. Undeterred by
a fall coldness which drastically alters the last traces of the
summer, I have made a few escapades to the forest and I have
taken my steel colleague with me.
I have directed my first steps towards a beautiful, mixed forest
and a slop by which unhurriedly flows the Brda River. As injur-
ing live trees without a justified reason is shameful even for a
pirate, I have rented a few pine branches with a diameter of cir-
ca 15cm, which covered ground after a deforesting which has
taken place nearby. So, a cold, but sunny morning of the early
fall passed by for me among a rusting sound of the trees which
have slowly dropped leaves and dump clatter of steel which
bitten into the soft, not so dried wood. Lumbering pine wood
www.fragoutmag.com