Bowline Knot • Most Useful Knot In The World

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 30 июн 2023
  • 🔵 Bowline Best Uses Here! • We Almost DIED ☠️ Esca...
    This is how to tie a Bowline Knot, snap to bowline and tying to a structure. We needed this knot a lot sailing the Bahamas.
    • Bowline Knot • Most Us...
    #bowline #sailing #travel

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @LyfeUntethered
    @LyfeUntethered  Год назад +18

    🔵 Here's where we used it! ruclips.net/video/Z_aALo4vob4/видео.html&pp=gAQBiAQB

    • @Ln-cq8zu
      @Ln-cq8zu Год назад +1

      Science, art, extreme satisfaction, life saver and last but not least useful 😊

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Год назад

      @@Ln-cq8zu Woot! Thanks Lynne!

    • @fivecitydirttracker4776
      @fivecitydirttracker4776 Год назад +2

      What kind of instrument goes on that wall hanger friend?
      Just curious 🤔
      ✌️ 🪢➰ 👍

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Год назад +1

      @@fivecitydirttracker4776 acoustic guitar!

    • @santiagocruz9426
      @santiagocruz9426 Год назад

      What about a sliding bowline

  • @AryaEbrahimi
    @AryaEbrahimi Год назад +313

    Man, I've been tying bowlines for 30 years and I've never seen it done this way. Learn something new everyday!

    • @alvindueck2104
      @alvindueck2104 Год назад

      Started it off like a marlin spike hitch

    • @88wolffy
      @88wolffy Год назад +23

      I was a sailor for a number of years, and have used the bowline for maybe 20 years, and I like you, have never seen it done that way.
      Pretty cool!
      I always make a loop and say the squirrel comes out of the hole, goes around the tree and back in the hole 😂

    • @ozbudgaming7341
      @ozbudgaming7341 Год назад +11

      I was just thinking that’s the weirdest way I’ve ever seen a bowline tied.

    • @JohnH0130
      @JohnH0130 Год назад +8

      Same thought, "That's not a bowline...wait....ummm....yeah, it turns into a bowline just fine. Wow.'

    • @jimm9818
      @jimm9818 Год назад +4

      This looks like the harder way.

  • @treesavages
    @treesavages Год назад +928

    Bowline is not the knot that never comes undone but it’s the knot that always comes undone even after put under extreme loads.

    • @TechDvrNJ
      @TechDvrNJ Год назад +60

      ... then you're not tying a bowline

    • @treesavages
      @treesavages Год назад +119

      No. You’re not tying a bowline.
      A bowline will absolutely come undone if it doesn’t stay under load. Especially if a bowline is subjected to slack in the line.

    • @guywhoclimbsstuff8689
      @guywhoclimbsstuff8689 Год назад +43

      It can untie itself, because it is non-jamming.

    • @guywhoclimbsstuff8689
      @guywhoclimbsstuff8689 Год назад +37

      Best knot in the business, for hoisting heavy loads and untying them afterwards.

    • @ptle
      @ptle Год назад +48

      no, @treesavages is correct. The bowline is meant to be easily undone, even after an extreme load, which is why you should do an overhand backup if you don't want it to come undone.

  • @JBlandford
    @JBlandford Год назад +12

    Technically speaking, they can come undone with cyclical loading (loading and unloading them repeatedly) which is why they don’t get used for rock climbing much these days

  • @michaelfrancis3558
    @michaelfrancis3558 Год назад +3

    Please do more videos like this. I always found the complicated thing about tying knots was that when you went to apply it to something, it wasn't the same as tying it in your hand. This is actually very useful and informative.

  • @johnwick6995
    @johnwick6995 Год назад +25

    I used the Bowline Knot almost exclusively in my 45 year career as a High Steel, Stage, Arena, Stadium, and Theatrical Rigger.
    When pulling up the Heavy Steel Chains, Steel Cables, Equipment, and sometimes the Motors themselves, that lift and secure the Lighting, Sound, and Sets in the air above a Stage, Crew, or an Audience, you need a reliable knot which won't slip, come loose, and is easy to untie, both in the air and on the ground.
    We used a lot of other specialty knots as well, but 9 of 10 were Bowline.

    • @Dan-vd2vp
      @Dan-vd2vp Год назад +3

      Yep, can do it all with pretty much just a clove hitch, a square knot and a bowline

    • @sirgalah561
      @sirgalah561 7 месяцев назад

      what rope were you using though? was it hemp or sisal?

    • @danielvincent1277
      @danielvincent1277 5 месяцев назад

      Me too tower riger for years....always finish that knot with a half hitch....she will slip when wet

  • @roguerangerroger
    @roguerangerroger Год назад +9

    This knot makes me feel intelligent whenever i do the variations of how to do it

  • @motrock93b
    @motrock93b 11 месяцев назад +2

    At first, this looked complicated. After I tried it a few times I decided it's a great method to know, since I can now tie a bowline with my eyes closed. The rabbit/tree method is easy to remember, but I can't tie it with my eyes closed very easily. This may be a factor in an emergency situation, like working in darkness.
    Thank you for demonstrating this method!

  • @grumd0
    @grumd0 Год назад +1

    Such a great explanation, I watched it once, then took a usb cable and tied the knot first try without looking at the video again. So simple!

  • @PyeGuySailing
    @PyeGuySailing Год назад +375

    There's also " the rabbit goes out the hole, around the tree and back down the hole"

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Год назад +35

      yep! that's the way I learned, but this looked more fun for a change!

    • @imdeplorable2241
      @imdeplorable2241 Год назад +14

      I've never seen it done that way. Thanks.👍

    • @ThatSB
      @ThatSB Год назад +24

      This is way better. People who do the bunny method often mess up direction

    • @jeffreyastjohn
      @jeffreyastjohn Год назад +4

      Yeah that’s the way we learned it. I don’t know that I could describe it but I can tie it blindfolded after so many (used to rock climb).

    • @goldstinger325
      @goldstinger325 Год назад +11

      ​@ThatSB i've never messed it up bunny style because i'm not an idiot. people will fuck up everywhere they can. bunny method isn't more difficult, people are simply idiots

  • @mrydobon
    @mrydobon Год назад +390

    I've watched a dozen how to tie a bowline shorts and this was by far the best one

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Год назад +10

      Appreciate it!

    • @jwalker6260
      @jwalker6260 Год назад +23

      Really?! I thought he complicated the hell out of it. There are much simpler ways to show how to tie a Bow Line knot & proper ways to pronounce it too. It is not a knot for hitting pins with a ball.

    • @francisvantuyle
      @francisvantuyle Год назад +4

      You should learn them all then teach children. My Father was in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers during WWII as a Major. He started teaching me when I was 4. He even tied a boline by throwing a loop and then tossed a loop into the center. It was like watching a magician on stage.

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Год назад +1

      @@francisvantuyle That’s awesome!

    • @snackette
      @snackette Год назад +1

      ​@@jwalker6260waiting for your video explaining it better.

  • @randyporter3491
    @randyporter3491 6 месяцев назад +2

    I taught rope rescue at our fire dept for 30 years, but this is a new bowline method. I taught the "one hand" method (around yourself) and the old "out the hole, around the pole, back in the hole". Great method here, thanks for sharing !

    • @danieltemple3144
      @danieltemple3144 6 месяцев назад

      Everyone should know how to do a one-handed bowline knot.

  • @jeffschneider1372
    @jeffschneider1372 11 месяцев назад

    Learned many yers ago.. easy . .best way. I have showed sailors . . Thanks for showing people.

  • @user-ff5wk7op3y
    @user-ff5wk7op3y Год назад +135

    Never tied it like that in the tens of thousands of times I’ve tied it.

  • @jmind_xd8502
    @jmind_xd8502 Год назад +6

    I was taught the hole, rabbit, and tree trick. I’ll definitely give this a try at work today.

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  11 месяцев назад

      Try it yet?

    • @sirgalah561
      @sirgalah561 7 месяцев назад

      try tying one, one handed...

    • @TW-rc6kv
      @TW-rc6kv 6 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, the rabbit comes out of the hole around the tree and back in the hole. The beauty of this knot is it so easy to un tie
      and it will never jam

    • @model1897
      @model1897 5 месяцев назад

      ​@TW-rc6kv ...same why we were taught to do the bowling in boot camp.....

  • @bretgreen5314
    @bretgreen5314 Год назад +2

    I have tied a million bowlines and never knew this trick. Love it; I will use this alot

  • @aceventura3935
    @aceventura3935 Год назад +1

    Thanks for.posting this way , best way to describe the bowline knot is using this technique

  • @jfilm7466
    @jfilm7466 Год назад +36

    Put a loop in the last bit, tighten it up and you have a quick release version.

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Год назад +3

      Sweet!

    • @Nilafila76
      @Nilafila76 Год назад

      Hmmmm!

    • @jfilm7466
      @jfilm7466 Год назад +1

      @@Nilafila76 Aummmm

    • @skolsen4866
      @skolsen4866 Год назад

      I'm glad someone else knows this. I was going to add it to the comments.

    • @BlondeQtie
      @BlondeQtie Год назад

      this is not meant to be a fast release knot though?

  • @ritaparsons277
    @ritaparsons277 Год назад +8

    Love this method, works every time!

  • @Browneye57
    @Browneye57 5 месяцев назад

    An easier way to tie than I've always used - passing the working end through the loop, over the standing end, and back through the loop. This is much more efficient. Thanks!
    Oh, and I've been a sailor for over fifty years.

  • @Rainersherwood
    @Rainersherwood Год назад +2

    Idk how 99.9% of knot videos leave me more confused than a drawing… but not the case here. Perfect demo.

  • @mitchellminer9597
    @mitchellminer9597 Год назад +15

    Interesting way to look at it. Thanks.

  • @skipdreadman8765
    @skipdreadman8765 Год назад +15

    It's not that it's the knot that never comes undone, it's the knot that never slips. That is why it's the preferred rescue knot.

    • @sirgalah561
      @sirgalah561 7 месяцев назад

      id rather use a figure eight on the bight than that useless knot

    • @DanielinLaTuna
      @DanielinLaTuna 5 месяцев назад

      @@sirgalah561, I can do a bowline with one hand, in the dark, using this method, which makes it quite useful for me when I only have one hand available.
      The “rabbit story” knot, not so much.
      Takes me two hands to make a figure of eight knot - although I do like it, especially when I need to apply tension. It’s great on a bight.

  • @johngee9018
    @johngee9018 7 месяцев назад

    After using the "rabbit-and-hole" bowline for years, I learned of this more elegant version as the Eskimo Bowline. It's definitely a quick and easy favorite.

  • @rap5374
    @rap5374 Год назад

    I learned to tie this knot differently.
    The Bowline on a bite is my favorite for pulling trees down with a truck.

  • @marcinfo3099
    @marcinfo3099 Год назад +1

    Best knot post here. Bowline is King and i like this technique

  • @hanshart1472
    @hanshart1472 Год назад +3

    When changing jibs, I would use this method to attach sheets to the clew when using the flat jib bag. It made the heeling foredeck work much easier and safer.

    • @skhrm91
      @skhrm91 Год назад

      Oh!! Mister fancy pants is using fancy words none of trailer trash knows cuz we caint affords no sailboat. Cost of fuel is high. This is sarcasm people. Calm yourselves. I would never claim to know the words of sailing. Sounds too much like a fæg. Or one of those preppy 80’s dudes with boat shoes and a neck tied sweater. What a fæg. Yes. F-A-G Is misspelled so as to knot get this post deleted. Lol.

  • @cgreen1081
    @cgreen1081 Год назад +9

    This is the best walkthrough I've ever seen of this knot

  • @RaindropsBleeding
    @RaindropsBleeding Год назад +2

    I was never taught to do it this way. Thanks

  • @greatlakespowerstrokefx4
    @greatlakespowerstrokefx4 Год назад +2

    We call that a speed bowline on the sailboat. Its great for when you need to change sheets or halyards quick, like in a storm or after a knock down.
    I wrap it around my fingers on one hand, so i can run up the deck, shove the end of the line though whatever im securing, and shove it though the opening just as you show and pull tight. You can tie 3/4 of the knot from the safety of the cockpit and then go forward when the time is right, do your fix and get back before a wave blasts you. Good stuff

    • @Joe-fr7ww
      @Joe-fr7ww Год назад

      You're making it way too complicated

  • @marcelenduro3009
    @marcelenduro3009 Год назад +9

    Interestingly, the bow line is not used in rescue applications because it has a tendency to come undone

    • @Austin1990
      @Austin1990 Год назад +1

      Cannot be used by arborists in rigging because it will vibrate loose.

    • @marcelenduro3009
      @marcelenduro3009 Год назад +2

      @@Austin1990 that's really interesting. It's the same with rescue applications as there's a lot of movement on the lines

    • @jmroscoe3143
      @jmroscoe3143 Год назад +2

      Great for constant loads is about it, super simple and quick to do though - eyes closed for a semi reliable knot is useful

    • @gr8fulthom
      @gr8fulthom 7 месяцев назад +1

      It's the knot that will easily come undone.😮

    • @brianmclaughlin4419
      @brianmclaughlin4419 7 месяцев назад

      You mean in Rescue Operations where they need Two Ropes but use 10 and Walk all over Everything ??

  • @chaddy1980
    @chaddy1980 Год назад +8

    "A knot that will never come undone," WRONG. This is the opposite of why a bowline is a great knot.

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Год назад +1

      So I’m learning. Solid under tension, but can still untie it.

    • @chaddy1980
      @chaddy1980 Год назад +3

      @LyfeUntethered the main reasons that a bowline is a good knot are, it won't slip and tighten the loop, and you CAN undo the knot once there is no tension 😉

  • @normferguson2769
    @normferguson2769 6 месяцев назад +1

    I used a 1” poly rope in Saudi to pull other trucks out of the sand. The first time in used a plain knot and had to cut it off my truck. I used the bowline after that and it always came undone when I need to take it off. Amazing knot!

  • @jelliebird37
    @jelliebird37 9 месяцев назад

    That is a great way f visualizing the knot the way it’s supposed to work. Thank you!

  • @mjk6618
    @mjk6618 Год назад +3

    Thank You! 💕🌲

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Год назад +1

      You are so welcome!

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Год назад +1

      I’m here to help!

    • @mjk6618
      @mjk6618 Год назад

      ​@@LyfeUntethered
      Just checked-out and being a SCUBA Diver (lover of 💦 ) I liked your vids so much I just sub'd!
      Great stuff!
      BTW, Thanks for the quick response! 💕

  • @crave809
    @crave809 Год назад +23

    Where were you when I was in Boy Scouts?!😂
    Their instructors were like “do it like this.” And would tie it quick and be like “you got it right?” And walk away. Knot day was the worst! You make it so easy tho wtf man?! 😂

    • @Tolohtony
      @Tolohtony Год назад +1

      I was like "What's wrong with my square knot??" In Scouts.

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Год назад +1

      I was an Eagle Scout. But never learned my knots then! 😂

  • @jamesfisher9594
    @jamesfisher9594 Год назад

    That is so much better than ever other explanation of how to tie this knot.

  • @misterlarryb
    @misterlarryb Год назад

    Excellent demo! I was taught a "snap bowline" which is similar, maybe even identical, but most times when I try to "SNAP" and yank the knot snug, it hangs up and I end up spending extra time loosening and re-dressing it. For me, the key is "...and then hold the working end to itself like this..." I will definitely practice this approach, and comparing it to what I think I was taught.

  • @kaylanmonson5949
    @kaylanmonson5949 Год назад +59

    the Bowline is a great tension knot but you should always back it up

    • @jayhaddan7927
      @jayhaddan7927 Год назад +8

      Dude you never worked with bowlines then. We use them everyday and there is no backup needed. Ibew union journeyman, I’m sure if this was true I’d have learned it in the apprenticeship

    • @eclark53520
      @eclark53520 Год назад +29

      @@jayhaddan7927 bowline is well known to come undone in a system where the knot is loaded and unloaded a lot. This is the reason the 'Yosemite tie off' version of the bowline exists. This is also why bowline is no longer taught in life saving systems. It's now the figure 8 on a bight or figure 8 follow through if you need it around a fixed object.

    • @jayhaddan7927
      @jayhaddan7927 Год назад +1

      @@eclark53520 we don’t have that system, we just use it. No loading unloading( whatever lies your saying) here. In 30 years has a bowline ever failed me by coming undone, because it doesn’t of you actually tie a bowline

    • @jayhaddan7927
      @jayhaddan7927 Год назад +2

      @@eclark53520 matter fact if the bowline gets tight enough, I bet you don’t get it out.

    • @ke6gwf
      @ke6gwf Год назад +17

      ​@@jayhaddan7927just because you have not experienced it doesn't mean that it's not reality.
      If you are just using it to lift heavy stuff up it works, because it's a tension knot.
      But when you use it to tie a boat off for instance, and every wave loosens and tightens the rope, the knot can work loose over time.
      But pretty much any rock climbing or rescue application uses a Figure 8 knot instead of a bowline now, they are just more reliable.

  • @cconnon1912
    @cconnon1912 Год назад +3

    Good video showing it going around something. 👍For new people to knots you should explain the standing in and working end.

  • @FrankNStein-kt5eb
    @FrankNStein-kt5eb 11 месяцев назад

    Simplest explanation I have seen so far. 👍🏻

  • @quantumtwig1303
    @quantumtwig1303 Год назад

    That blew my mind I'm a sailor but I have never tied it like that I always make a loop and then thread the other end through, around some things and then back (hard to describe). Thanks for this video! Your method seems wayyyy easier lol

  • @patrickfitzoot
    @patrickfitzoot Год назад +5

    There are faster , less complicated ways of tying a Bowlin to a ring etc

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Год назад +1

      Well, sure, the rabbit in the hole, and all that, but this is way more fun!

    • @patrickfitzoot
      @patrickfitzoot Год назад +1

      @LyfeUntethered actually I was thinking of the method that is basically, take the bitter end through the ring, a half hitch with the standing and biter end, collapse it into a "the hole" part of the rabbit tale, and finish. Couldn't find a vid.. I'll make one if I get a chance

  • @effyleven
    @effyleven Год назад +4

    What a horribly long-winded way of tieing a simple Bowline. Boy! I am glad I can do it quicker than that!

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  Год назад +2

      But is it as FUN as this way? I went slow so people could follow, but it's actually pretty simple if you do it a few times!

    • @roguerangerroger
      @roguerangerroger Год назад +1

      Explain how you would do it quicker.

  • @owemylife
    @owemylife Год назад

    I've been tying this 20x 5 days per week for thirty years. To watch it tied this way is making my brain itch.

  • @davemi3213
    @davemi3213 Год назад +1

    I love that you decided on showing the slip knot version of the bowline

  • @Jubie82
    @Jubie82 Год назад +1

    During sailing training in my youth an expierianced sea captain showed me how to tie one one handed. The premis was if you fall overboard & someone throws you a line, you wrap it around your waste. Keeping the rope tight to the rescue with your left hand ,bringing the end of the rope around your waist & giving yourself some slack, tie a boline with your right hand between your left hand & your body. Once done you can let go of the rope & get the loop under your shoulders.

  • @benfurbank
    @benfurbank Год назад +1

    I some how didn't know this was so simple. I know how to do a bowline but just do it in a much worse way. So thank you for the demo. And I just practised this with my eyes closed so I can now be confident I know it forever

  • @biz-73
    @biz-73 11 месяцев назад +1

    I swear it this is the best video on how to tie this damn knot. Thanks!

  • @charlesolrich5898
    @charlesolrich5898 Год назад

    Well you are partly correct. The bowline is a knot that will not come undone on its own when under load but can be untied easily no matter how much load is applied.

  • @paulnicholson92
    @paulnicholson92 Год назад +1

    Best knot clip ever.

  • @jfh667
    @jfh667 Год назад

    10/10 text book. While I always see it broken up like that, Ive personally struggled with this knot at first.
    I find it so much easier to think of the first part as making a slipping knot. Which is one of the names Ive seen this method be called.

  • @ebeneezerscrooge2942
    @ebeneezerscrooge2942 Год назад +1

    That’s a nice way to tie it. Love that knot. Favorite knot of mine.

  • @zandemen
    @zandemen Год назад +1

    That's a really nice way of tying it, very simple. it will come undone in some stiffer ropes like twisted polypropylene.

  • @jarrodmcc123
    @jarrodmcc123 Год назад +1

    Yes! I always called it the one handed bowline. Super useful in rigging and construction.

  • @drew6116
    @drew6116 Год назад +1

    I love the wooohooo! from the sailor.

  • @tonyjohnson8929
    @tonyjohnson8929 7 месяцев назад

    This is the most amazing. I've been chasing rabbits around trees in this hole and back.. thank you very much

  • @josephestes7076
    @josephestes7076 Год назад

    Best bowline demo ive seen. We'll done.

  • @_Roasted_Marshmallow
    @_Roasted_Marshmallow Год назад

    I use a bowline to lower limbs down on tree removals and trimming. Great video for a great knot.

  • @GeraldAlonzoMourning
    @GeraldAlonzoMourning Год назад +6

    I’m used to tying it a different way but I’m definitely gonna master this way I think I like it better

  • @drscribbles-mcsnifflephd.2996
    @drscribbles-mcsnifflephd.2996 Год назад +1

    Didn't know it could be done that way, this is a lot easier than what I was doing, lol, thank you 🙂

  • @MostlyPeacefulNeanderthal
    @MostlyPeacefulNeanderthal Год назад +2

    I've heard a bowline can slip under variable tension, like dragging something in the water. Never tested it though

    • @nathanrose5906
      @nathanrose5906 Год назад

      It can come undone easily if you want to lock it off use a Yosemite tie off

    • @josifish4
      @josifish4 Год назад +1

      It may be true that's why you always prove it with a half hitch with one foot minimum tail

  • @metaljacket866
    @metaljacket866 Год назад +1

    That's excellent,
    looks like great way to create loop(s) on rope that won't tighten on itself or cause slack in the rope . Good knot for bows among everything else .

  • @michaelharp703
    @michaelharp703 9 месяцев назад +1

    I like the rabbit in the hole technique myself but, this is good. I like it, sir.

  • @perryincorporated2268
    @perryincorporated2268 Год назад +1

    I have never once heard someone refer to the ends of lines as "standing" and "working" and just having that distinction clears up so much confusion

  • @prod805212
    @prod805212 Год назад +1

    Nice, ty!

  • @davewatchedthat
    @davewatchedthat Год назад +1

    That’s a slightly different technique than I’m used to, and I like it! Thanks!

  • @scottschroeder4920
    @scottschroeder4920 Год назад

    Never seen that method. Thanks for something new to practice!

  • @yourhighness81
    @yourhighness81 Год назад +1

    Love the explanation ❤

  • @b.vonschnauser207
    @b.vonschnauser207 Год назад +1

    Excellent instructional vid!

  • @geoffc376
    @geoffc376 7 месяцев назад

    EXCELLENT tutorial!

  • @jimfitzhugh6050
    @jimfitzhugh6050 8 месяцев назад

    Best description I have ever heard.

  • @K00LSP00L
    @K00LSP00L 11 месяцев назад

    Bowline is my favorite knot, but I can’t say I’ve ever seen it tied this way.

  • @cattyW
    @cattyW Год назад

    One handed version to tie it taught in boy scouts is my favorite and quickest for me by far

  • @Aj-po9dc
    @Aj-po9dc 7 месяцев назад

    Ah! That was a beautiful explanation!

  • @altcompbinaries
    @altcompbinaries Год назад

    If you roll the first loop over the top of standing, roll it over a second time towards the standing end, then you can just reach through and pull the loop (trunk) up to pass the working end through in a smoother motion.

  • @Grubdissimo
    @Grubdissimo Год назад

    Can we agree as someone that was never a cub scout or had a dad that knots are wild.

  • @ernietetrault3403
    @ernietetrault3403 11 месяцев назад

    I've been tying bowlines for over 50 years, and it's infinitely easier than that. Not only can I tie it behind my back, but at Maritime Academy (and at sea) we'd see who could do it behind the back, the fastest

  • @JoshuaCollins
    @JoshuaCollins 9 месяцев назад

    I really like this method thank you!

  • @cywalker2047
    @cywalker2047 5 месяцев назад +1

    Awesome - I’ve never seen it done this way before

  • @GPSJayDog22
    @GPSJayDog22 Год назад

    Of all the bowline knot how to videos, this is the best if seen. Thank you :-)

  • @Maxonaboat77
    @Maxonaboat77 Год назад +1

    Not strictly a bowline as the bitter end is on the outside of the loop - but as you can pre-form the bit on the left and pass the bitter end through an eye and basically tie the knot with a yank it looks totally boss!

  • @MrStarmix999
    @MrStarmix999 Год назад

    Yeah nice and quick never mind all that rabbit and hole stuff .. super quick thanks

  • @bhgraf08
    @bhgraf08 Год назад +1

    If you are toproping, tie off or backup your bowline. They can come undone from repeated loading and unloading

  • @jamesedwards6269
    @jamesedwards6269 Год назад +1

    🤯never tied one that way. My mind is blown.

  • @copedawg2010
    @copedawg2010 Год назад +1

    One handed bowline for the win!

    • @LyfeUntethered
      @LyfeUntethered  11 месяцев назад

      Done! ruclips.net/video/S2S90jDKwHY/видео.htmlsi=76RtSjY3F-OgSUXc

  • @Alanoffer
    @Alanoffer Год назад +1

    I was in the sea cadets when I was a kid and they taught us all these knots ,and through my life in construction those knots always came in handy

  • @qldfirefighter1
    @qldfirefighter1 Год назад +1

    Excellent a new method.

  • @DryAx3
    @DryAx3 Год назад

    And best part of this technique is that you can prepare loop an advance, then just put end of rope arround anchoring point, through loop and its done. Its really good when you have to be fast, rough weather, etc... There is even faster method of making this loop with only one hand.

  • @thechumpsbeendumped.7797
    @thechumpsbeendumped.7797 Год назад

    It would be helpful if you explained what the “working” and “standing ends” are their relevance and what the knot is useful for.

  • @virusO1OOOOO1
    @virusO1OOOOO1 Год назад +2

    Oh. My. God. This is like when i learned the fast way to tie your shoes! 😅😂

  • @Daplug213
    @Daplug213 11 месяцев назад +1

    That was good! Subbed and 👍

  • @Ehrentraud
    @Ehrentraud Год назад

    This is nice, but there is an even quicker way of doing it, which my father taught me, where you make the loop with the working end in your hand. This is so easy that you can also do it behind your back.

  • @Senssimille
    @Senssimille Год назад +1

    I can tie this knot 5 different ways never did it like this. Nice

  • @rickhorvath
    @rickhorvath 10 месяцев назад +1

    Never saw it done this way. But it looks nice when tightened.

  • @emmitt169
    @emmitt169 Год назад +1

    That is an inside bowline tie and outside bowline One is stronger than the other. And I've never seen a bowline tied like that. Pretty cool

  • @scooby0000
    @scooby0000 5 месяцев назад +1

    Great method 💪👍

  • @Skibidi_Male_X
    @Skibidi_Male_X Год назад

    I'm hard-headed and this video is knot what I expected. Very cool

  • @fredmercury1314
    @fredmercury1314 Год назад

    That was two fingers and a thumb.
    If I were blind, this knot would now be impossible, and my yacht would float away.
    I hope you're proud of yourself.

  • @colfaxschuyler3675
    @colfaxschuyler3675 7 месяцев назад

    Pass the line around whatever you want the line around. Take the working end in your hand with the loose end between and extending from your index and middle fingers. Lay the two fingers over the standing end. Do them over around and under the standing end, creating the loop, ending with your palm up.
    Curl the two fingers over with the end of the working end, back through the loop. Remove your fingers, tighten the loop.