When you churn out as many cool, wallet-friendly knives as Civivi does, you can be forgiven for occasionally just totally making up a name that sounds fun and funky.
I was convinced that’s what they had done with the Natterjack, until I Googled and learned it is actually a European toad with a shape and texture that totally jibes with the formidable flipper’s aesthetics.

The name is even more appropriate with the latest iteration of the blade, as modern toads descend from creatures that have been on Earth for more than 70 million years.
While the new Natterjack (Damascus) does not go that deep, the history of its particular style of steel does trace back a couple of millennia. Not too shabby.
Battle toad
As many knife and EDC enthusiasts know, Damascus steel has a background as ancient and epic as its name.
Dating back at least to the time of Alexander the Great, who died in 323 BC, Damascus was originally crafted by Middle Eastern blacksmiths, who pounded out a special steel from India called wootz.






