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Old 12th April 2022, 09:31 PM   #1
David R
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Default Kukri with carved wooden scabbard.

Last of the spoils from the weekend. I have seen these on Kukri blogs and threads, and now I have one. The blade is excellent, the scabbard something I wanted for ages, but the grip plates are either crude replacements or heavily worn, and don't really match the rest of the package.
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Old 13th April 2022, 08:14 AM   #2
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Mine must have come from the same Sarki carver . It's a smaller one, 6in. blade.
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Old 13th April 2022, 12:36 PM   #3
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The funny thing is that I remember seeing others like these elsewhere on the 'net but have nothing in my files. I would say a traditional pattern with little variation. This is the only other carved example a quick peruse on google threw up! There are plain ones around though.
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Old 15th April 2022, 12:15 PM   #4
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Appears to be a fairly common style of wood scabbard. Below is my example. I borrowed the black and white photo below showing a similar style from Peter Dekker's site.
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Old 15th April 2022, 07:02 PM   #5
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Nice to see others. I don't think they are rare in absolute terms but this was the first I saw on a dealers table here in the UK.
Personally I think the grip on mine lets it down somewhat, the blade and scabbard being discernibly better quality... but they all have a history.
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Old 16th April 2022, 02:17 AM   #6
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Quote:
Originally Posted by David R View Post
Nice to see others. I don't think they are rare in absolute terms but this was the first I saw on a dealers table here in the UK.
Personally I think the grip on mine lets it down somewhat, the blade and scabbard being discernibly better quality... but they all have a history.
I should clarify that I am a keyboard collector and when I comment about seeing ethnographic weapons, that I don't own, it is almost exclusively from photos online (and a small collection of books). Of the wood scabbards I've seen they seem to fall in 3 classes - ones like these in this thread with pattern carvings, ones carved to mimic traditional leather scabbards, and fairly primitive (usually very worn) versions. I like the handle on your khukuri.
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