One of the great lines of the 1993 movie Tombstone which followed the story (in a Hollywood way) of Wyatt Earp, his brothers Morgan and Virgil, and his best friend Doc Holiday. Being a little bit of a movie geek I have used this line before and I assumed it had some connection to Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, where Huck always played second fiddle to Toms schemes. So when Ive used it around friends Ive basically meant, Ill follow your lead.
For reasons that will be apparent in a minute, that movie and that phrase has been on my mind over last week. So I did a little research into what the it was actually supposed to mean. I found THIS PAGE of research done by a fellow who advises for the Oxford English Dictionary. Basically back in the mid to late 19th Century the phrase Im your huckleberry meant Im the right person for the job. So I wasnt too far off in my usage, and "the right person for the job" fits so much better to the way Im thinking about it now.
I handsaw all of my dovetail joints. I have tried all kinds of saws in my search for the right huckleberry, and I have always found something I didnt like or had to modify to get a saw to perform up to my standards. When it comes to dovetailing there are two things I have come to appreciate in a good saw.
1) I like an aggressive cutting saw. Even though I enjoy working with hand tools that doesnt mean I want to spend three minutes and thirty strokes to accomplish one cut,
2) I like a open handle western style design to the grip because I like the way it fits my hand, the control I get, and, sometimes most importantly, - it looks good. Seriously, an open handle on a dovetail saw just looks right. More than any other joint, dovetails have a drama about them, a theatrical soul that screams look here look at me! It seems natural to me that the saw that helps create them should reflect that same spirit.
Open style handle made in poplar to replace the handle that came on a Japanese style pull saw. |
Now if I had my way, Id own one of everything than Mark makes, yes I consider him a friend and we swill some beer together on occasion, but I really do believe in his products and process, where else can you go to have one craftsman, just one guy working out of his shop, build you a saw to your specifications. Focused 100% on your order as he puts the pieces together, hand sharpens and sets the teeth, then takes it for a quick test drive to make sure it lives up to his high standards before he ships it to your door. Mark is creating a product that hasnt been available in a new out of the box form probably since the hand tool haydays of the early 1800s. Where else can you go and get that these days? Unfortunately, as a family man raising three kids in this day and age I cannot afford to indulge myself the way I would like and I am forced to strive to get the most bang for my hard earned buck. Heres where the saw Mark has nicknamed Wyatt Earp comes in.
Wyatt Earp |
Flea Market Disston Backsaw in need of a little TLC |
A while back I made a flip statement on Twitter that I was having a good time cutting dovetails in the shop that day. Shannon Rodgers of The Renaissance Woodworker Hand Tool School answered and teased that I should try cutting them in white oak and then decide if I was having fun. Right away I felt compelled to check over my entire shop to see where the spy cameras had been installed, because I was cutting them in white oak that day, and I was having a tougher time of it than usual. Now I stood at the workbench at Bad Axe Headquarters and that exchange came back to me as I was plowing thorough 6/4 white oak to an inch or more depth in 5 to 6 strokes. When I was done cutting four or five cuts I absentmindedly rubbed my fingers over the backside of the cuts, certainly expecting there to be tear out. After feeling for it I had to hang my head over the board to look and see, There was some small amount of tear out but hardly enough to think abouut much less mention.
Down in Marks Saw Dungeon Giving "Wyatt Earp" a workout. |
But Mark was not through grabbing my attention. He pulled out a shorter 10 dovetail saw, also with an open handle, and put it in my hand. I looked closely at what hed given me.
Thats a very fine toothline. I said.
Mark nodded Yup, 16 ppi. He answered.
Ive got to admit, I said, Ive owned high ppi saws before and I dont use them because they dont work very well.
Well, that is something I worried about, He admitted, But give it a try and tell me what you think
I started on some 4/4 cherry, and eventually went to some 5/4 white oak, again I put the saw through all the paces Mark and I could come up with. including crosscutting with the rip filed teeth. The experience was totally different than all my other experiences with a high ppi saw. I started working with it biased to dislike it and in no time it won me over. Mark said he was thinking about nicknaming it "Doc Holiday" as a complement to the larger "Wyatt Earp." I didnt really make the connection right at that moment but later on, as I spent the rest of the day working in the shop, and even later on at the dinner table with my family, I was still thinking about "Doc." I still feel that my order of the larger Wyatt was the right place for me to start, but I can think of so many instances, especially recently, where I would have reached for the Doc Holiday instead. I started to revise my opinion that I could live with only one dovetail saw.
The 10" Doc Holiday, changed my mind about high ppi saws |
No tool can replace good working technique or the hands and eye of a craftsman, and if youve read my blog here for any length of time, youll know that I do not break down and gush over a tool often, if ever. These are the first tools I have ever come across that I would have to call highly recommended by the Oldwolf Workshop. To his credit Mark has created a pair of saws that Im sure will compete with your favorite dovetail saw and will probably win that competition hands down. Individually or together Wyatt Earp and Doc Holiday are ready to be your huckleberry. You can find Mark and order these saws for yourself over at his website www.badaxetoolworks.com
The humble huckleberry (from Wikipedia) |
Oldwolf
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