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on Orders Over $99The parang came out of Malaysia, where jungle means rattan, bamboo, hardwood vines, and secondary growth dense enough to stop a man cold. The locals figured it out centuries ago: a straight machete waves through grass but bounces off real tropical hardwood. What the jungle needs is a blade that is forward-weighted, tapered for balance, and heavy enough to split rather than slice. The Condor Parang is that blade, built on the original Malaysian template without compromise for the western yard-tool market.
Blade length is 17 5/8 inches of 1075 high-carbon steel finished in black epoxy powder coat. Spine thickness runs a full 1/4 inch at the bolster — not a specification to brush past. Condor then distal-tapers the blade toward the tip, shifting mass forward to load the cut, and grinds spine-to-edge with a convex geometry that wedges hardwood apart instead of binding in it. The result is a machete that chops three-inch bamboo in two strokes, flips green limbs off hardwoods like balsa, and still holds a working edge through a full day of it. Reviewers running this blade on invasive bamboo eradication and homestead clearing report edge retention that embarrasses thinner Latin patterns costing a quarter as much.
The hardwood handle is traditional South American hardwood, shaped to fill the palm and absorb shock through long sessions. Wood is not a fashion choice on a parang — it is the material that kills vibration on hard impacts, warms in cold weather, and develops character rather than looking worse with time. A full-tang construction runs the 1/4-inch stock all the way through the scales. No rat-tail, no hollow pommel, no structural shortcuts. The included heavy leather sheath with a swivel belt loop carries the weight comfortably at the hip and keeps the edge covered in the truck bed, the pack, or the tool shed.
For clearing hardwood, processing brush, or running a serious homestead, this is the real thing.