What knots do you find most useful while backpacking. What do you use them for.
What knots do you find most useful while backpacking. What do you use them for.
"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm."
-Churchill
http://www.flickr.com/photos/scorpiorising80/
http://www.rayjardine.com/ray-way/ta...rfly/index.htm
I practiced this but never used it.
The 5 knots learned by most Scouts are square knot, sheet bend, two half-hitches, taught-line hitch and bowline. I may have them listed in descending order of usefulness to A.T. hikers. I can imagine applications for all of these knots in the course of a long hike on the A.T. for those who know them.
Bowline knot is the one I use most. The line will part before this knot comes undone and it's very easy to untie regardless of the strain placed on it.
I've spent quite a bit of time messin' around on boats. I've used all the knots mentioned. They all serve a purpose. But when hiking, the most useful knot is the knot I use to tie my shoes.
Roland
I frequently use a clove hitch to secure the line to my food bag to the trunk of a tree; a bowline and taut-line hitch for tent guylines; and of course a square knot for various applications, including securing rope to the object I found in the woods to throw over the branch while bear-bagging. Sometimes I'll use 2 half-hitches also.
GA←↕→ME: 1973 to 2014
For those of you who might use a bowline to hold a very critical load with one of the fancy, ultra-stong high-tech lines like Kevlar, Spectra or Vectran, beware. The bowline won't hold the full strength of the line.
One of the most useful knots is a simple old daisy-chain. Make a slipped half-hitch, slip another in the loop, slip another in the loop, repeat until you're happy or the line's used up, then lock with the bitter end in the final loop. Easy to untie becuase the final loop's never under load, and uses up a lot of excess line.
If I remember correctly that knot is started by tying what's called an overhand knot.
Kerosene, I now recollect also learning the clove hitch when a Scout.
I believe people who know how to tie knots find ways to use their knowledge. Oftentimes, those who don't know how to tie knots get by fine without this knowledge.
Last edited by emerald; 08-04-2007 at 21:41.
surgeon's knot, square knot, clove hitch, taut line hitch were the ones I used most.. surgeon's knot to tie my shoes....
Round turn with two half hitches.....it's like two half hitches, but doesn't loosen if it slides around whatever you've tied it to.
Wrap the rope around whatever you are tying complete 360 around and then tie the two half hitches.
Taught-line hitch and bowline.
"The trail is the thing, not the end of the trail. Travel too fast and you miss all you are traveling for." - Louis L'Amour
You are like my very own personal encyclopedia. Everytime I want to know something you end up posting it. I have been trying to remember what this knot is called to look it up.
Thanks everyone. I am learning knots and wanted to know the most useful rather than waste time learning a bunch of fancy knots that are redundant.
I JUST used the bowline to tie my line to my tarp ends.
"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm."
-Churchill
http://www.flickr.com/photos/scorpiorising80/
The Prusik knot is probably one I use second to the bowline and the plain ol square knot.
The Prusik knot is great for being able to tighten a line, such as when pitching a tarp.
An animated prusik knot being tied (note, line does not have to be a loop)--
http://www.abc-of-rockclimbing.com/c...rusik-knot.asp
Another, with photos of a prusik knot (page 10)--
http://www.forestry.gov.uk/pdf/FCRR-JD-0402.pdf/$file/FCRR-JD-0402.pdf
A "modified" or fake prusik knot--
http://www.outdooridiots.com/feature...k/prusik_6.asp
All the ol cavers out there will be familiar with the prusik knot, I bet.
RainMan
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[I]ye shall not pollute the land wherein ye are: ... Defile not therefore the land which ye shall inhabit....[/I]. Numbers 35
[url]www.MeetUp.com/NashvilleBackpacker[/url]
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for me, in ~ descending order of use:
* hennessey knot
* 2 half-hitch
* taut-line hitch
* clove hitch
* prolly square knot...
Everywhere is walking distance if you have the time.
I documented the ones I find useful in the WB article on knots: http://www.whiteblaze.net/forum/show...9057#post99057
Those animated knot sites are great.....never seen them b/4 now ..
..(wishin' they were around when I was a Boy Scout}..
[QUOTE=Appalachian Tater;388208]http://www.rayjardine.com/ray-way/ta...rfly/index.htm
Don't see the need for this extra loop or whatever for this knot. If used this way for a tent peg without the extras when the peg is pulled from the ground the hitch slides right off. Ray's invention? Yeah right!!! Besides taut-line hitch is the proper knot for this task!
Last edited by mrc237; 08-06-2007 at 11:00.
E-Z---"from sea to shining sea''
"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm."
-Churchill
http://www.flickr.com/photos/scorpiorising80/
Two halve hitches, taughtline and boweline are the ones I use the most.