When You Care Enough to Tie the Very Best
Bowline knots are used when you want a secure, non-slip loop at the end of a line, such as for hanging a hammock from a tree, mooring a boat, or attaching a safety line to a tree. Although it's the bowline is a simpleUnlike the loop of a slip knot, a bowline's loop will not change size easily. If you make a loop that is too small, it's easiest to untie the knot and start over with a longer free end. If the line is taut, you can't tie or untie a bowline. If you are mooring a boat to a piling, make the knot with a slack line and then drop the loop over the piling.
Knot making terms: "Line" is what you probably call "rope". The "standing end" is the longer end of the line where the line will be carrying the load. The "bitter end" is the free end you are using to make the knot with, or the dangling end left after the knot is finished. Now you know where the phrase came from: when you have reached the bitter end, you are at the end of your rope and in deep kim-chee.
Let's get this hammock tied to the tree. You will have to imagine the tree as you look at the picture.
1 - Stand facing the tree and wrap the line around the tree from right to left so the free end is in your left hand.
2 - Grab the line near the tree with your right hand and make a loop by twisting the standing end under the bitter end. It should be about three times bigger than the line. One problem beginners have is that they make this loop too big.
3 - Pinch the crossover point between your right thumb and forefinger to hold the loop while you make the rest of the knot. (see illustration)
4 - Make sure the free end is crossing over, not under, the loop.
5 - Push the free end up through that loop you are holding, and pull line through until the line is snug to the tree. (arrow 1)
6 - Wrap the free end around the standing end, as you keep pinching that loop. (arrow 2)
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- It's a secure knot and far better than the usual granny knot.
- It's easy to tie as long as there is no weight or tension on the line.
Type in Your Comments Below
Baconator
04/28/2008
Great instructions! :-)
jcorn
04/24/2008
Wow, very impressed, as was my husband :)
Tsu Dho Nimh
04/21/2008
PenPress - thanks. I struggled for weeks trying to make a standard bowline, and then found this version. It drives sailors crazy, because it "looks wrong". :)
PenPress
04/21/2008
thanks for the step-by-step instructions......................
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