Thursday 2 August 2012

Knots


At Greatwood camp when I was 11 we learnt to tie a round turn and two half-hitches (along with a clove hitch, reef knot, bowline, sheet bend and sheepshank). We were told it was used for mooring boats, because it stayed secure no matter whether the line was tight or slack. I've used it ever since whenever messing around with boats, and taught it to Lewis and Charis when they were on board Erin Mae for a day in June.

Yesterday I noticed Dawn of Great Haywood Marina using a different hitch when we tied up for a pump-out. I'd seen her use it before, but this time I asked her to show me. She said it was used by all the old working boats, so I've been busy rehearsing it (in my mind, at least).

Today I found it on a boating knots website. Unsurprisingly it's called a Lighterman's hitch, though it no doubt has other names as well. Dawn tends to tie it without a complete turn for temporary mooring. Another boater looking on said he always ties it with a complete turn, and that its advantage over the RT2HH is that it doesn't over-tighten under a day of other traffic moving you back and forth.

New skill – good fun. Now to build it into muscle memory.

4 comments:

  1. You'll have to show it to me when we get back!

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    1. OK Mo! Thought the knots website I linked to actually has animations of all the knots which are dead easy to follow.

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  2. That's what I now use, after someone showed me a while back, although I didn't know it was called a Lighterman's Hitch. I don't put the extra turn in the middle, though. It's certainly quick and easy to tie and untie, and holds very well.

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    1. The knots website I linked to has "Tugboat hitch" as an alternative name. I guess when you're towing, you want a hitch which is secure but which can be undone easily and in a hurry if you need to.

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