Skip to content

Helle Didi Galgalu Knife

by Helle
Sold out
$229.00
SKU 90841
Availability: Translation missing: en.general.icons.icon_check_circle icon Out of stock

Notify me when back in stock

Designed in collaboration with the Voetspore team of South Africa. A knife designed to withstand the hardships of transcontinental journeys of Africa.

Named after the Didi Galgalu Desert in Northern Kenya, seen by many as the last frontier of Africa. The Didi Galgalu utilizes a full tang construction. Three rivets reinforce the African Kiaat wood handle. Blade thin enough to preform as a knife should when cutting or carving. The Scandinavian ground blade, genuine leather sheath, and Kiaat-wood handle assure Helle’s renowned rugged beauty.

  • Weight: 193g
  • Blade Material: Sandvik 12C27 Stainless Steel
  • Blade Thickness: 3.0 mm
  • Blade Length: 129 mm
  • Handle Material: African Kiaat & Vulcanfibre
  • Handle Length: 120mm
  • Sheath Material: Genuine Leather
  • Sheath Weight: 57g

    Maintenance

    Helle knives are designed to retain their sharpness as a lifelong outdoors companion. But it is still important to take care of your knife and its sheath.

    The Handle. Dry the handle with a soft cloth if wet and wax occasionally.

    The Sheath. The leather needs to be impregnated occasionally with colourless impregnation agent (grease or wax) to keep supple. Dry the sheath carefully in room temperature if it becomes wet.

    The Blade. Wipe the blade with a soft cloth if wet and treat with grease occasionally.

    Sharpening

    Use a diamond tool or a wet stone for sharpening. Place the knife bevel flat to the sharpening tool and work the entire blade. Work one side until you can feel a slight burr on the opposite side. Switch side and repeat the procedure until you feel the burr on the first side. You have now established an edge.

    Remove the burr by stroking the blade gently over the sharpening surface on both sides, as if cutting very thin slices. Keep the bevel flat towards the sharpener and move from side to side until the burr is gone.

    If the blade is very dull or damaged, use a fine-grained grindstone and plenty of water and sharpen until you have a raw edge. Use much cooling liquid and never sharpen on a dry stone. A hot-ground edge looses its heat treatment and ruins the blade.