|
2torial #0540:
Learn2 Tie
Basic Knots (Continued)
Knot 6: Lets go bowline
Sometimes you need to make a loop at the end of
a rope that'll stay a loop. The bowline (pronounced
BO - lin) is a critical knot used to make a
loop that's secure and will stay open for as long
as you need it. An old mariner's saying goes, "I
could make the devil himself a good sailor if he
could learn a bowline."
Step 1: Hold it
Hold the working end (the longer end) of a rope
in your nondominant hand. The working end should
trail up and away from you.
Step 2: Loop it
Make a loop by passing the free end over the
working end. For purposes that'll soon be clear,
call this loop "the hole." Hold the hole with your
nondominant hand at the point where the two ends
cross over.
Note: When you make this loop, it's
critical that the free end pass on top of the
working end. It's also a good idea to make it
relatively small, because in the bowline there's a
second, larger loop that should be easy to
distinguish.
Step 3: Thread it
Move the free end under the hole, and pass the
free end up through the hole. (Leave enough rope
hanging down on this free end. Later, it'll form
the second, larger loop.)
Step 4: Wrap it
Pass the free end over the working end, then
around behind it, and then back down the hole
again. Be sure you pass the free end through the
small loop of the knot and not the second, larger
loop you're creating.
Step 5: Tighten it
Hold the free end and the side of the larger
loop together in one hand. Hold the working end in
your other hand. Pull gently on the working end
until the knot is snug. Then grab the loop with one
hand, the working end with the other, and pull
tight.
Step 6: Remember
it!
Here's a clever way to remember the bowline:
imagine a pastoral woodland scene. The free end is
a rabbit; the working end is a tree with a rabbit
hole at the bottom of it.
Say to your self, "The rabbit comes out of the
hole, goes around the tree and back down the hole
again."
Knot
7
|