Hawks are like knives and guns, they have specific shapes and reasons for what they are.
What is the intended purpose of this hawk? "Around the farm" sounds like utility work with a lot of chopping and little need for a spike, more a poll for hammering. "Traditional" does fit that.
I have the Condor TRT and the offset head warps to one side on the blow, plus you might be forced to learn how to use it differently than a hammer when you pull back and smack your skull with that spike. Ask me how I know. I found the grip too fat and removed the paracord. The handle was a tad long and butt heavy and the rolled tube welded into a round shape made for harder gripping. Baseball bats do fine that way, a hawk with an offset head, not so much.
I wanted the utility of the spike head to pry and lever with it, and RMJ does that job well according to others. But the real issue is that they are utility breachers, not a woodsmens or farm hawk. I was all set to take the Condor into the woods deer hunting until I found it really wasn't all that. Nor was it light.
I am now looking for a wood handle traditional with poll head that will be lighter, chop more easily, has an oval handle to index and grip in the hand better, bearded with the angle of the face pointing down to the butt, not parallel. Goes to what jobs I think the hawk would need to do in a camping or field clearing role, not urban breaching. Digging out a stump and chopping roots would be typical (not that I would expend that kind of work on it when a chain and vehicle could do it. )
Hawks have different shapes and styles for different purposes and everybody posting their favorite for internet social climbing isn't what is being asked.