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Emerald Dragon Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Pocket Knife - Stonewash

Price:

10.99


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Bayou Talon Dragon Spring-Assisted Pocket Knife - Emerald Stonewash

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/7331/image_1920?unique=0614869

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Late summer on the bayou, clothesline rope, feed sacks, and brush all need cutting. This spring-assisted pocket knife rides light, then snaps open with a flipper tab and a clean, talon-shaped stonewash blade. The emerald dragon scales give grip when your hands are damp. Liner lock holds solid. Toss it in the truck, slip it in a pocket — it’s the kind of blade Texans forget they’re carrying until they need it.

10.99 10.99 USD 10.99

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
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  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
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When a Pocket Knife Has Some Bite

End of the day along a slow bayou outside Lufkin. Humid air, skeeters thick, feed sacks in the truck bed. You reach for the knife that always seems to be in your pocket, even when you don’t remember putting it there. A quick thumb on the flipper tab and that stonewash talon blade snaps out, clean and certain, like it’s done it a thousand times. That’s the Emerald Dragon quick-deploy spring assisted pocket knife earning its keep.

Why This Spring-Assisted Pocket Knife Works for Texas Carry

This isn’t a showpiece that lives in a drawer. Closed, it runs about four and a half inches, riding flat against your pocket with a metal clip that doesn’t scream for attention. Open, you’ve got roughly three inches of curved, talon-style steel with a stonewash finish that shrugs off box tape gunk, feed dust, and whatever you drag it through on a hot workday between San Marcos and Seguin.

The spring-assisted action is tuned for one-hand use. You touch the flipper tab and feel the assist take over, swinging the blade out in a clean arc. No wrist theatrics, no struggle in a pair of work gloves. Liner lock snaps in behind the blade, so if you’re cutting hay bale twine in a Panhandle wind or breaking down pallets behind a Houston warehouse, you’re not wondering if that edge is going to fold back on you.

Stonewash Talon Blade Built for Texas Chores

The blade is shaped like a claw for a reason. That hook bites into rope, irrigation line, and strapping without you needing to muscle it. Along a fence line outside Abilene, that curve lets you snag zip ties and cut them clean without digging for the perfect angle. On a small place east of Tyler, it slips under stubborn feed bag stitching and unzips it with one pull.

The plain edge keeps sharpening simple. No serrations to fight with, just a straight, honest edge you can bring back on a stone in the garage or at a tailgate. The stonewash finish hides the scuffs and scratches that come from rattling around in a truck console between receipts, spent brass, and a half-crushed can. It looks better with use, not worse.

Emerald Dragon Grip Suited to Texas Heat

The handle is aluminum, contoured so it settles into your hand instead of perching on top of it. The matte finish and raised dragon-scale art aren’t just for looks. On a 102-degree afternoon in a Hill Country parking lot, when everything you touch feels slick, that textured dragon pattern gives your fingers somewhere to lock in. Gloves on, bare hands, or damp from clearing brush along a creek, you still get a sure grip.

A red-accented pivot draws the eye, but the knife itself stays low-profile. Slide it into jeans in Fort Worth, work pants in Odessa, or the inside pocket of a denim jacket on an Amarillo night. The pocket clip keeps the spine hugged to the seam, out of the way when you sit, close at hand when you stand.

How This Texas-Friendly Assisted Knife Fits the Law

Texas used to be fussy about what you could carry. Those days are mostly gone. Under current Texas law, spring assisted knives like this pocket knife are legal to own and carry for most adults. They’re not treated as prohibited switchblades, and the blade length keeps it in the comfort zone for everyday use from Dallas offices to rural feed stores.

This isn’t a double-action automatic or an OTF. The blade doesn’t jump straight out of the handle; it pivots. You start the motion with the flipper tab, then the assist finishes it. That difference matters if you care about staying on the right side of Texas knife culture and the law while still having a fast, one-hand-opening blade ready for work.

Reading Texas Knife Laws in Plain Language

State law is one thing; local expectations are another. A spring-assisted pocket knife like this tends to ride under the radar in most Texas towns because it looks like what it is: a tool. You can carry it to the lease, the feed store, the shop, or the plant without making a statement. Keep it clipped inside the pocket, use it for work, and it fits how Texans actually carry blades day to day.

From Box Cuts in Houston to Mesquite Roots in Kerrville

In a Houston warehouse, this knife spends its time chewing through shrink wrap, banding, and cardboard. That talon profile digs in at the corner of a heavy box, then slices clean across without slipping off the edge. In suburban garages around Plano and Round Rock, it’s the blade that opens Amazon deliveries, trims irrigation tubing, and cuts nylon cord when the kids’ backyard project needs last-minute fixing.

Out closer to Kerrville or Junction, it ends up clearing small mesquite suckers and stubborn weed stalks around fence posts, or cutting baling twine when you’re tossing square bales by headlamp. The spring assist saves time when your other hand is bracing a gate or holding a lead rope. The lanyard hole at the butt lets you tie in a short cord and hang it from a belt loop or ATV key hook, so it doesn’t vanish between the seat and the door.

Texas Use Case: Night Game in the Back 40

Running a small game call in the back pasture west of Waco, truck backed up to a tree line, this knife ends up handling the unglamorous work. Cutting tape off a gear case, trimming paracord for a makeshift hanger, cleaning up a snagged strap on a folding chair. The dragon scales catch the glow of a small LED lantern, but the action stays quiet and sure. You flip, it opens, you cut, you close — nothing more to it.

Texas Use Case: Busy Shift in a San Antonio Shop

On a concrete floor under buzzing lights, this pocket knife lives on the seam of a pair of work pants. Every time a pallet comes in wrapped tight, the blade does its job. The talon tip nicks the plastic without digging into the product. The spring assist keeps the motion short and efficient; the liner lock lets you bear down when you strip cable or shave a shim. End of the shift, you brush off the stonewash blade, close it, and clip it back in place.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Spring-Assisted Pocket Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. In Texas, OTF knives and other automatic knives are legal to own and carry for most adults, thanks to changes in state law over the last few years. The main things to watch now are location restrictions and any special rules for minors, not whether the blade is automatic, spring assisted, or folding. This spring-assisted pocket knife opens with a flipper and assist, so it sits comfortably within what Texans commonly and legally carry every day.

Is this spring-assisted pocket knife good for everyday Texas ranch and town use?

It is. The three-inch talon blade and compact closed length make it small enough for town carry in places like Lubbock or College Station, but the curve and solid lock give you enough cutting power for ranch chores and weekend land work. It’s the knife you clip on in the morning and forget about until something needs cutting between the house, the shop, and the pasture.

How do I choose between this assisted knife and an OTF for Texas carry?

If you want a fast, reliable work tool that doesn’t draw much attention, this spring-assisted pocket knife makes sense. It opens quickly, rides light, and looks like a regular folder to most folks, from West Texas diners to Austin job sites. An OTF knife Texas buyers might pick when they want pure speed and one-hand deployment straight out the front, but they’ll often keep a spring-assisted pocket knife like this one for the everyday cutting that fills most days.

First Cut: A Texas Moment

Picture a Saturday morning outside a low metal shop near Brenham. Air still cool, gravel dust on your boots, a coil of braided rope that needs trimming to hang a new gate. You thumb the flipper tab, feel the assisted action bring the emerald-handled dragon claw to life, and the rope parts clean in one pull. No fuss, no drama. Just a spring-assisted pocket knife that fits Texas hands, Texas work, and Texas days, ready for whatever else the morning brings.

Blade Length (inches) 3
Overall Length (inches) 7.5
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Stonewash
Blade Style Talon
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Theme Dragon
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Flipper tab
Lock Type Liner lock