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  2. Boom hitch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boom_hitch

    The boom hitch is a type of knot.It is a rather robust and secure method of attaching a line, or rope to a fixed object like a pipe, post, or sail boom. [1]It can be finished with a slip, that is, a bight tucked under rather than the whole line pulled through in the last step.

  3. Rope splicing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rope_splicing

    Chain splice – Attached the working end of a rope to a chain. [7] Figure-eight "splice" knot – A splice-like bend knot used for joining two ropes. Horseshoe splice – A cut splice where the two sides of the loop are of unequal length. Long splice – A splice used to join two rope ends forming one rope the length of the total of the two ropes.

  4. Halter hitch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halter_hitch

    The halter hitch is topologically the same knot as the Falconer's knot, i. e. a slipped overhand knot around the main part. [3] The falconer has to tie the same knot one handed, throwing the end around the anchor object (the perch), gripping it with a scissoring fingers act, pulling the bight from opposite side of the main part using the back of the thumb.

  5. List of knots - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_knots

    Granny knot – secures a rope or line around an object; Grief knot – (what knot) combines features of granny knot and thief knot; Gripping sailor's hitch – used to tie one rope to another, or a rope to a pole, when the pull is lengthwise along the object; Ground-line hitch – attaches a rope to an object

  6. Anchor bend - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anchor_bend

    The anchor bend is a knot used for attaching a rope to a ring or similar termination. The name is a misnomer , as it is technically not a bend , but a hitch . Origins

  7. Diamond hitch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diamond_hitch

    The steps used to tie a diamond hitch with six points of anchorage. In the diagram shown to the left, six points are used, but the top left, right, bottom left and right points can be ignored by simply "tucking" the rope beneath the load to be tied down, provided its shape and size allow, as is the case when the knot is used on a pack-saddle where those four extra points are simply the four ...

  8. Reever Knot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reever_Knot

    The relationship between the Reever Knot and the Vice Versa Bend was first pointed out by Clements In his 2004 article "The Vice Versa Bend and the Reever Knot". [1] His analysis of the symmetry of the two forms of the knot led him to suggest that the Reever Knot, being completely symmetric, is the better version of the knot.

  9. Monkey's fist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monkey's_fist

    Like the Turk's-head, the knot is tied with a single strand, but here the resemblance ceases. The Turk's-head diagram consists of a single line; the common monkey's fist diagram has three separate lines, which are best represented by three interlocking circles, in the best Ballantine tradition.