Tactical Spork

by
posted on December 29, 2011
tactical-spork.jpg

You remember sporks, right? The plastic spoon-fork hybrid your school cafeteria provided as the only utensil required to eat the gelatinous mélange of ingredients unfit for zoo animals that comprised your fifth-grade lunch? Well, that tool might bring back unhappy childhood memories, but it is actually a useful utensil in the field. For one thing, it eliminates the need for a spoon and a fork, which take up precious millimeters and grams in your overstuffed tactical backpack. Another advantage of the spork is…well, we can't really think of one, but thankfully, Columbia River Knife and Tool has.

The company's Eat'N Tool is a hyper-compact tactical spork with a bottle opener, screwdriver/pry tip and three different-sized metric wrenches, held to your gear via an included mini-carabiner, which CRKT's lawyers insisted upon noting is not weight bearing. All of these tools, plus the indispensible pronged spoon make the Eat'N Tool a sensible addition to your go-bag, even if your memories of spork usage involve flinging so-called meatballs at the girl you wanted to marry when you were seven, or in the case of our editors, last week.

Latest

Breda Competition Shotgun
Breda Competition Shotgun

First Look: Breda Competition Shotguns

Two new models designed for the fast-paced world of 3-gun.

Hang Tuff Splatter Pack Kit

The fun of a reactive target, the measurable accuracy of a paper target.

New Revolvers for 2024

The latest wheelguns from the front lines of the revolver renaissance.

I Carry: Springfield Armory Garrison 4.25" 1911 Pistol in 9 mm in a Wright Leather Works Holster

In this week's episode of "I Carry," we have a Springfield Armory Garrison 4.25" 1911 pistol in 9mm carried in a Wright Leather Works Closer IWB holster with a Buck Knives Wharncliffe Deploy pocketknife.

First Look: Magpul DAKA Storage Bins and Straps

Keep your gear organized inside your DAKA-compatible case.

Safariland Hosts SAVES CLUB Event to Honor Injured Officers

The event honors officers who endured a life-threatening incident.

Interests



Get the best of Shooting Illustrated delivered to your inbox.