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and in Monty Python skits................ I'll get my coat..........Lumberjack is used mostly in the U.S. and maybe eastern Canada
This isn't me but this is what I used back in the 70s when I was a logger(never call a logger a lumberjack), Husqvarna 2100
I'm not sure what part of the vocabulary you are missing. This is a right triangle triangolo rettangoloI'm missing some differences in the vocabulary...
"Jack" in the middle ages was a generic name for a man as well as actually being a name in use. Many stories and sayings have "Jack" as a character.Thanks for all the expanations!
Unfortunately my English is not as good as I would like to and I'm missing some differences in the vocabulary...
This isn't me but this is what I used back in the 70s when I was a logger(never call a logger a lumberjack), Husqvarna 2100
Dear Friends
The picture above is of a traditional tool widely used here in Italy by local lumberjacks (and myself in my garden).
Knowing that many of you have a familiarity with woods and trees I'd like to know:
A - Is this tool used outside Italy? (I think yes).
B - In a case of a positive reply to question A, the sharpening of this tool is symmetrical, ie can be used indifferently by right and left handed, or must be sharpened differently if used with the left hand or the right hand?
This is because in an Italian forum there are different opinions about it.
Thanks!