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Jere Lull wrote:
In article , Terry Spragg wrote: Garland Gray II wrote: I'd put two half hitches on that list, right behind the bowline Would you call that a reef knot, or a granny? Two half hitches are neither reef knot nor a granny. Nor are the reef and granny the same. Sorry, I think I can convince you otherwise. Try this: Untie your sneaker. Step by step, retie it. Tie the first overhand "knot", and look carefully. It's a half hitch, you can hold one end taut (this becomes the bitter end of the standing part, since you can't mess with it, it gets very bitter if you twist the free end on it, and it's the other end or the working part, the free or moving end) and look at what happens when you move the other end around, left to right, above or below the standing part. You get a half hitch. Tie another. I depends on the orientation (left or right) of the exit of the (knot bitter, nor taught bound, end, but the the working, free, end), as to wether you will end up with a reef or a granny. Two half hitches is an inverted reef, if you orient the underside rotation of the top half hitch in the "correct" way, depending on whether you start on the left end or the right end. Relativism is involved. You know, tie a reef. Pull one line tight, slide the two half hitches off. Tie the second half hitch the other way, and you got a granny, if you stretch the "used to be the free end" taut, and look at the result. It's a mathematical relationship expressible in the languge of knots, much of which I do not know. There is an intermediate stage to this transformation, and it is called a clove hitch, all from various combinations and views of two half hitches. Turn the clove hitch (tied around the other shoelace) inside out, so to speak, and you get a granny, all because you pulled one or the other end straight. Convinced? Terry K Now, one knot that I use all the time that I don't know the name of is a relative of the first: a half hitch with a loop taken through the hitch instead of the bitter end. I use it to gasket the main and temporarily set the fenders. Releases by simply pulling on the free end. Can be locked by taking the loop through a second hitch. Very handy and very fast to undo, even under fairly high strain. |
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