I will use this one on bear bags, when the line is too long, but I don’t want to cut it. This knot keeps our long ropes in one piece, despite our miscalculations in the field. This knot seems half magic trick, half practical knot, but it shortens a line without cutting the line. FYI, beer has an excellent center of gravity. Safety warning: For safety and stability while hoisting barrels, the rope around the barrel needs to be high above the center of gravity on the barrel, but pose no danger of slipping off the top of the barrel. This knot makes a fine bucket handle when the wire handle finally breaks off. Tie the ends of the rope together with a square knot and then then lift. Open up the overhand knot until it wraps around the top sides of the barrel. Then tie an overhand knot across the top of the barrel. Place your barrel or other object to be lifted on top of your rope. It allows you to secure a bucket, barrel or other cylindrical object to lift it in a well-balanced position. The barrel hitch has been used in sailing and construction work for centuries. Next, pull the working end tight, and secure the free end with two half hitches, just below the loop. Then pass the free end of the line around or through whatever you’re attaching the rope to, before passing the line through the loop. Start off by tying a figure eight knot with a loop of the line. While tying this hitch is a little complex, it’s worth the trouble if you need to tighten lines as much as possible before securing them-I use it all the time to tie down tarps or secure shifting payloads. The unique feature of the trucker’s hitch is it gives you a unique mechanical advantage for tightening up a line. You don’t have to be a truck driver to have a use for this rugged hitch. Trucker’s hitch Tie this hitch down tightly and you’ll create a mechanical advantage that acts like a pulley. Thread the free end across the loop passing under itself, and pull on both standing ends to tighten. Pass the other rope’s free end under the first loop, and then over then under as seen in the picture. To tie the carrick bend, form a loop with the free end of one rope. This square knot alternate joins two ropes together securely, and is easier to untie than a square knot. This knot can slip if there isn’t constant tension on the newly created loop, so keep something in the loop to hold it. Pull the new loop tight, and then pull the line to cinch the man harness knot. Grab the side of the loop and pull it through the gap between the line in the middle and the other side of the loop. Gather some slack in the line and make a loop so part of the line runs through the middle of the loop. This crafty knot allows you to put a loop in a line anywhere along the length of a rope when neither end of the line is free to tie a loop-and you didn’t hear it from me, but a man harness is great for cheating at tug of war. Man harness Need a loop in a line when neither end is free? The man harness can create strong loops in a rope or cord, which can be used for a variety of purposes. Two half hitches To secure shelter lines or hang up gear, you can tie (or untie) two half hitches in a hurry. To tie a sheet bend with fabric or a tarp, collect, squeeze, and shape the material into a “J” shape, and then run your rope through and around the “J.” 6. If the ropes are the same diameter and texture, the sheet bend actually resembles a square knot. Then pass the other rope through the hook shape from behind, wrap it around the entire fishhook once and then tuck the smaller line between itself and the other rope. To create a sheet bend, bend the thicker or more slippery rope into a “J” shape (like a fish hook). This knot even joins together lines or materials that normally couldn’t be joined together because of differences in diameter. I like it because it’s the best bend for tying different types of material together or joining different thicknesses of rope. The sheet bend is my favorite one of all, even though technically it’s a “bend”-a type of knot that connects one rope to another. The sheet bend Need to connect a fat rope to a skinny one? Do you need to connect a rope to the corner of a tarp that lacks a grommet? The sheet bend is one of the best choices to join dissimilar materials together.
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