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Knots


chrisjpainter
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For a while I've been fiddling around learning more and more knots. But it did get me thinking how many knots people actually use? Ignoring specialist angling knots (Albright, Palomar etc.) how many do PW users regularly, or irregularly turn to, and which ones?

P.s. Where should this go? Crafts and DIY? Country Sports? Other Topics? I'll leave that knotty problem to the mods...

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I used a couple in my angling days, 5 turn grinner for braid, Half blood for Mono and figure 8 for loops. These days a granny does as well as anything.

I did go through a phase of making lanyards for dog whistles where a bosun's knot was used

lanyard.jpg.fef1765d4723d6d235e9311db9b0b792.jpg

and this (also in a spiral variant)

Capturedd.JPG.5dc3ff5ca9ce16fcf72f2d3732799f20.JPG

(robbed from the internet, thanks to the owners of the photos)

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I quite like the 'truckers hitch'. 'Thief knot' is handy as you don't need to go back to untie it BUT needs twice as much rope.....unless using it as a marking line, then you just run out the "release end"  hard to explain so it's easier f you google it

bowline, reef, round turn and two half hitches, clove hitch, artillery hitch get used a lot

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A half hitch, a bowline, and a reef knot pretty much does me. The trucker's knot is a handy one to know too for securing stuff down. I think those four would cover most people's bases.

Wait, there's another one. The sheet bend. So make that 5  

Edited by Retsdon
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Don’t like blowing my own trumpet but I must say I am exelent at tying knots.My uncle who worked on  the dry docks taught me .As a kid I always had some rope with me and had books on knot tying.I joined the scouts at a early age and I could match most of them .I never tried splicing rope that’s something I’d like to try.

 

 

 

 

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4 minutes ago, DUNKS said:

As a boy seaman at HMS Ganges I was taught numerous knots. Never used most of them.

Now I suppose I use the bowline, reef knot and clove hitch most. Bumped into a guy once who could manage a bowline one handed "behind his back." try it!

If you can tie it one handed then behind your back is almost as easy.  Not so easy with my shoulder but my wife can breeze it. Where she struggles is tying the bowline to a fixed object rather than tying it as a loop. 

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