My favorite way is a butterfly coil finished with that same alpine finish around the top, instead of the two legs together, so that the butterfly can sit over my backpack / shoulders. Really comfortable, since I can sit the rope on my backpack, meaning the weight goes through the backpack straps instead of using the rope as the shoulder straps.
Thanks Yann. Great tips. I use your method if I want to use the ends of the rope - typical for leading or building a static anchor. If you know that your next use of the rope will be setting a top rope, you may want the middle of the rope first. In this case, I coil it double from the ends toward the middle which leaves the middle point available. Same butterfly coil, but doubled.
If wearing the rope pack over an actual backpack, I do the final tightening loops around the top of the coils so that each side hangs separately and can straddle the backpack instead of being behind it.
This method (and yours) of doing the rope backpack with a natural butterfly coil is so much better than the method often taught of coiling from the middle as it can be used right away without recoiling 👍. I don't even understand why coiling from the middle is ever taught.
Must be one of these 3? ruclips.net/video/cQJRB53-QRY/видео.html ruclips.net/video/RGhqXPdVeoc/видео.html ruclips.net/video/zuQNZ3_U-Qs/видео.html I will not look at all of this. But if you tell me if it is part 1 or 2 or 3 and at what time, I will look into this! Thanks!!
@@trollmcclure1884 Really cool! I would not know how to make that for climbing. I guess this survival coil (8m rope) is the equivalent of the Alpine Coil (climbing 60m rope). Thanks for schooling me on this!
My favorite way is a butterfly coil finished with that same alpine finish around the top, instead of the two legs together, so that the butterfly can sit over my backpack / shoulders. Really comfortable, since I can sit the rope on my backpack, meaning the weight goes through the backpack straps instead of using the rope as the shoulder straps.
Thanks Yann. Great tips. I use your method if I want to use the ends of the rope - typical for leading or building a static anchor. If you know that your next use of the rope will be setting a top rope, you may want the middle of the rope first. In this case, I coil it double from the ends toward the middle which leaves the middle point available. Same butterfly coil, but doubled.
This looks like the “Goldilocks” of the Traxion family. Can’t wait to get my hands on one.
Great video! Thank you
If wearing the rope pack over an actual backpack, I do the final tightening loops around the top of the coils so that each side hangs separately and can straddle the backpack instead of being behind it.
Yes this is another popular way of finishing it. Single butterfly like this right? ruclips.net/video/jPbAn7Fr5c0/видео.html
@@YannCamusBlissClimbing like that, exactly.
This method (and yours) of doing the rope backpack with a natural butterfly coil is so much better than the method often taught of coiling from the middle as it can be used right away without recoiling 👍. I don't even understand why coiling from the middle is ever taught.
@@GabrielCharette 😂 😂 😂
There's another one. A coil you can pull from without untying it. I saw it at Realybigmonkey channel.
Must be one of these 3? ruclips.net/video/cQJRB53-QRY/видео.html ruclips.net/video/RGhqXPdVeoc/видео.html ruclips.net/video/zuQNZ3_U-Qs/видео.html I will not look at all of this. But if you tell me if it is part 1 or 2 or 3 and at what time, I will look into this! Thanks!!
@@YannCamusBlissClimbing I've found it. Minute 10 or 13 ruclips.net/video/cQJRB53-QRY/видео.html
@@trollmcclure1884 Really cool! I would not know how to make that for climbing. I guess this survival coil (8m rope) is the equivalent of the Alpine Coil (climbing 60m rope). Thanks for schooling me on this!
Hahaha, a flat knot! Elle est bonne!! Mais, merci!
To fast I have no idea what your doing