How To Tie The Bowline

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  • Опубликовано: 30 янв 2023
  • The most famous knot in the world.

Комментарии • 283

  • @DaddyBeanDaddyBean
    @DaddyBeanDaddyBean Год назад +32

    That is the easiest bowline method I've ever seen. Thank you!

  • @J_ismyname48
    @J_ismyname48 Год назад +65

    I learned this at the age of 6 and after 40 yrs I still use it more than any other knot aside from a truckers hitch.

    • @just-a-fella3212
      @just-a-fella3212 Год назад +4

      Yes, 50 years later I still use all my old scout knots around the farm and when camping; the bowline, sheet bend, clove hitch, timber hitch, and numerous others knots and hitches that I cannot recall the names of but I know and use them all,..... and of course, the trucker's hitch.
      Knots are like wrestling and jujitsu holds; once you know them they stay with you for life, even though you forget their names.

    • @DanielRamirez-go7kc
      @DanielRamirez-go7kc Год назад +4

      Its crazy how the older you get the more use of knots you learned when young come in handy lol

    • @gamedinnah
      @gamedinnah 11 месяцев назад

      Same here

  • @rockymntnliberty
    @rockymntnliberty Год назад +115

    Never seen it tied that way. I have always tied it like I learned it, the squirrel comes out of the hole runs around the tree and back into a hole.

    • @baarni
      @baarni Год назад +10

      Same… but it’s a rabbit

    • @JizzyPalms
      @JizzyPalms Год назад +3

      This makes total sense. Rabbits squirrels trees and holes where the racoon poops. I'm so confused 😅

    • @rockymntnliberty
      @rockymntnliberty Год назад +1

      @@baarni
      No, it's a gopher.

    • @RonaiHenrik
      @RonaiHenrik Год назад +2

      same, but it's a fish and a cave :D

    • @OscarHernandez-vy7nm
      @OscarHernandez-vy7nm Год назад +1

      I find it interesting how different we all learn them, because I learned it this way and when I saw someone do it the way you do I was confused and amazed at the same time

  • @Ceilingfan_
    @Ceilingfan_ 5 месяцев назад +1

    What an excellent explanation and demonstration, thank you sir

  • @Colt45.
    @Colt45. Год назад +19

    I use it almost daily but have never seen it done that way. My dad was in the Navy and taught it to me as a boy camping over 60 yrs ago. Thanks

  • @stevel1475
    @stevel1475 Год назад +3

    Dad didn't teach me anything.
    Thanks for the good instructions, will always remember where I learned this knot!

  • @tk1269
    @tk1269 Год назад +1

    Fantastic! Ive never seen it tied using a bight, so much easier! Great work, thank you

  • @BurchellAtTheWharf
    @BurchellAtTheWharf Год назад +6

    An now I just saw the 13th way to tie a bowline 👌👍

  • @Rick-xd8gr
    @Rick-xd8gr Год назад +3

    You are a great teacher my friend!

  • @tonyjohnson8929
    @tonyjohnson8929 Год назад +2

    Thank you. Rabbit around the tree, thru the hole.... got me sometimes lol

  • @youcanthandlethetruth6976
    @youcanthandlethetruth6976 6 месяцев назад

    I never knew you could tie it this way. Definitely going to start using this method.

  • @kaleb_barbour3
    @kaleb_barbour3 Год назад

    This makes so much more sense, thanks for finally teaching me!

  • @russellf1339
    @russellf1339 Год назад +3

    Now this is content! Thanks for sharing bro 👍

  • @wensong4094
    @wensong4094 Год назад +4

    It's like marriage, you cannot escape

  • @alexpineiro7960
    @alexpineiro7960 Год назад

    Excellent demo on clarity and explanation..Thank you

  • @RichardBronosky
    @RichardBronosky Год назад +2

    I've tied this knot countless times. This is a new technique for me. Specifically, "push a small bite through the loop you just formed". Thank you!

  • @dragonfirefunctionalfitnes7925
    @dragonfirefunctionalfitnes7925 Год назад +6

    I've never had it explained this clearly. Perfect vid. 🎯

  • @Robyrob7771
    @Robyrob7771 Год назад

    I use this knot all the time. Very versatile!

  • @BlackDogBones1964
    @BlackDogBones1964 Год назад +1

    Its amazing to think that someone many many years ago spent time coming up with this particular knot.

  • @donmcleod8307
    @donmcleod8307 2 месяца назад

    Dad taught me a different way 40 years ago.
    But this is much easier
    I agree with a previous comment saying that bowline and a truckers hitch are pretty much the minimum you must know
    Thanks

  • @sinnerface3930
    @sinnerface3930 7 месяцев назад

    EXCELLENT!!! TY!!

  • @diligentsun1154
    @diligentsun1154 8 месяцев назад

    This is now the way i do it, Forever.
    Thanks for the tip!

  • @matthewbowerman618
    @matthewbowerman618 Год назад

    Excellent nice way of putting it it makes it easy to understand it this way!

  • @Christian_Prepper
    @Christian_Prepper Месяц назад

    *PREPPER PRO TIP: I learned the quick slipknot method to make a bowline when I worked as a longshoreman for more than a decade but I must confess I never thought of a good way to describe the overhand loop. "like you'd turn the ignition on your car"- excellent and easy to remember. Now although that is a good bowline, I'd like to suggest Not dropping the working end down through the slipknot because it always ends up on the inside of the bowline which can occasionally get pinched in between the load/post and the rope during movement. Then in order to release/untie the knot the entire load may have to be moved again to free the working end or worse yet, a worker may be tempted to reach between the bowline and the load and get their hand/glove caught. (I'd like to think no one is ever stupid enough to take risks but then reality strikes and you have an injury) Thus, I suggest running the working end UP through the slipknot from underneath because it not only ends up on the outside but under rare conditions you may wish to use the end to re-enforce the bowline by tying an additional knot around the standing end. Great video. Peace.*

  • @Khether0001
    @Khether0001 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thats by FAR the best way of doing this knot! Excellent job!!!

  • @hughbegg274
    @hughbegg274 Год назад +4

    Somehow, I skipped knot tying during childhood. One of my great regrets.

    • @RichardBronosky
      @RichardBronosky Год назад

      Sir, I grant you a 2nd chance at childhood. Don't waste it. Next up, search for "Alpine Butterfly". ☮️❤️🌈

    • @johnnyadams1755
      @johnnyadams1755 Год назад +1

      It's never too late to start.

  • @gregvetter5070
    @gregvetter5070 Год назад

    I thought the way I tied a bowline was easy. That's pretty slick.

  • @tyronekim3506
    @tyronekim3506 Год назад

    That is slick! Many thanks for the video.

  • @sinnerface1
    @sinnerface1 Год назад

    GREAT application!

  • @ljones98391
    @ljones98391 Год назад

    Thank you for a trip back to girl scout days.

  • @chrismcpherson7582
    @chrismcpherson7582 Год назад

    I have tied a bowline several thousands of times and I have never seen this, neat.

  • @woodywoodpecker3643
    @woodywoodpecker3643 11 месяцев назад

    Best bowline vid ever

  • @alejandrogorostiza1197
    @alejandrogorostiza1197 Год назад +3

    I love this. I don't know knots and I want to learn. Show me all the knots you know sensei!👍🏾

    • @RErnie-gv1hv
      @RErnie-gv1hv Год назад +3

      A useful, and interesting book on knots is, "Why Knot?", by Philippe Petit. Does the name seem familiar? Petit is the guy who walked a high-wire between the Twin Towers in 1974.

    • @alejandrogorostiza1197
      @alejandrogorostiza1197 Год назад +1

      @@RErnie-gv1hv thanks for that. I will look it up😁👍🏾

    • @RErnie-gv1hv
      @RErnie-gv1hv Год назад

      @@alejandrogorostiza1197 You're welcome. I hope you can find the book. I'm sure you will enjoy it.

  • @manp1039
    @manp1039 Год назад

    it is a helpfull know to learn.

  • @randerodr7389
    @randerodr7389 Год назад +3

    Haven't seen it tied this way. Easier to tie and to remember than the way I've been doing it. Thanks.

  • @pedroclaro7822
    @pedroclaro7822 Год назад +1

    I just noticed how similar this is to the marlin spike hitch that I use so much!
    I do my ‘bowlines’ differently though, I tie an overhand on the tip of the rope so it doesn’t slip, and then tie another one a palm behind it, before I close it I thread the tip back into it, and when I tighten the second overhand it cinches in, and the first overhand prevents it being undone.

  • @MICHAEL-lx5cy
    @MICHAEL-lx5cy Год назад

    Simple great way to tie it!!!!

  • @zeevorourke6876
    @zeevorourke6876 Год назад +2

    These demos are so clear, really well done.
    Nice that you started with the bowline

  • @ThisPlace4Now
    @ThisPlace4Now Год назад

    Love That Knot!

  • @coreyrowland5561
    @coreyrowland5561 Год назад

    Thanks

  • @augustsmith9633
    @augustsmith9633 9 месяцев назад

    Talk about the most convoluted way to explain something...😂

  • @MrRoutal
    @MrRoutal Год назад

    Rock climber and aplinist have been using this method of tying a bowline for for decades if not centuries , an I would think sailor for far longer!

  • @timcoolican459
    @timcoolican459 Год назад +2

    Good tutorial of the Bowline. This would be an excellent video for teaching people how to make the knot.

  • @barneymccord4759
    @barneymccord4759 Год назад +1

    Learned that knot in the boy scouts. Early 70s

    • @hardrockminer-50
      @hardrockminer-50 Год назад

      I learned the bowline in Boy Scouts in the early 60s. First knot, after square knot, I learned in 1961.

    • @hardrockminer-50
      @hardrockminer-50 Год назад

      But, I didn't learn it this way😂

  • @JonathanHolt1988
    @JonathanHolt1988 Год назад

    This is much easier and quicker than the standard rabbit around the tree method!

  • @AcidxAnarchy
    @AcidxAnarchy Год назад +2

    I can never remember a single knot when I need it. I should practice them some so I can remember lol

    • @RErnie-gv1hv
      @RErnie-gv1hv Год назад +2

      A useful, and interesting book on knots is, "Why Knot?", by Philippe Petit. Does the name seem familiar? Petit is the guy who walked a high-wire between the Twin Towers in 1974.

    • @AcidxAnarchy
      @AcidxAnarchy Год назад +1

      @R. Ernie o.O that does seem vaguely familiar. Interesting, thanks.

    • @RErnie-gv1hv
      @RErnie-gv1hv Год назад

      @@AcidxAnarchy You're welcome.
      Any library in your ares should have the book. If not, Inter Library Loan will get it.

  • @BjerkeRobin
    @BjerkeRobin Год назад

    Wow.... I just realised that all a bowline is is a sheet bend using one rope...
    Neat.

    • @txtoolcrib
      @txtoolcrib  Год назад

      That is correct. I actually have a video that discusses that very topic.

    • @q.e.d.9112
      @q.e.d.9112 Год назад +1

      Nah! A sheet bend is just a bowline using two ropes😊

    • @BjerkeRobin
      @BjerkeRobin Год назад

      @@q.e.d.9112 touché

  • @wildinamerica
    @wildinamerica Год назад

    Great tutorial. Remember the bowline can loosen if continually tensioned and untensioned .

  • @dgunn4408
    @dgunn4408 Год назад

    Brilliant!

  • @rafaelperez-ep7wi
    @rafaelperez-ep7wi Год назад

    Gracias mil.

  • @Dangerstophe
    @Dangerstophe 8 месяцев назад

    This is a snap bowline

  • @TheDarkstormy
    @TheDarkstormy Год назад

    I knew how to tie a Bowline, never knew a place that pronounced as a Bowling knot.

  • @Namastayawake
    @Namastayawake Год назад

    What I used to go up the mast of a sailboat

  • @amyduro1967
    @amyduro1967 Год назад

    I can only do it with the rabbit running around the tree and back into the hole, lol. I learned it that way when I was young and it stuck.

  • @joecruz4846
    @joecruz4846 Год назад

    Easy. Thanks.

  • @rwbishop
    @rwbishop Год назад +4

    A correctly tied Bowline can be quickly ID'd on sight. Look for the working end exiting to the 'inside' of the loop. Cool video, Thanks!

  • @alexbowser9801
    @alexbowser9801 Год назад

    It's what I really need

  • @MapleBar777
    @MapleBar777 11 месяцев назад

    That is the weirdest way I've ever seen it tied. Almost didn't recognize it at first.

  • @zackeriedawson4336
    @zackeriedawson4336 Год назад +1

    Also called the rescue knot

  • @johnwilson1094
    @johnwilson1094 Год назад

    Wow. A bowline without any tree, rabbit or hole to go into and out of. Like Eyescreamcake says, the running end needs to be tied back on itself for safety.

    • @txtoolcrib
      @txtoolcrib  Год назад

      Not necessarily, there are many variations of the bowline than don’t require a safety.

  • @E.L.RipleyAtNostromo
    @E.L.RipleyAtNostromo 8 месяцев назад

    I’ve always formed the standing end loop in the other direction, ascending right, then come back through the night on the loop with the bitter end pointed towards me. Ends up the same I guess, but the bitter end is on the outside.

  • @brianburnside5949
    @brianburnside5949 Год назад

    That was the most complicated way of tying a bowline I have ever seen.

    • @txtoolcrib
      @txtoolcrib  Год назад

      It’s called the snap bowline, and it’s been known for centuries.

  • @rpproductions31013
    @rpproductions31013 Год назад +2

    Always tie a safety on the tag end.

    • @two5seven14
      @two5seven14 Год назад

      Why

    • @matthew413
      @matthew413 Год назад

      Folllow the sharp end around and down beside the running line, you have a Yosemite bowline… its how climbers tied off for a long time, but the figure 8 proved stronger and easier to tie, so it became standard

  • @error.418
    @error.418 Год назад

    Love how all the old knot books and now all the videos reading those knot books say to turn the loop "like you turn the key in the ignition of your car." My brother in Christ, people push buttons to turn on their cars now. We need a new mnemonic.

    • @txtoolcrib
      @txtoolcrib  Год назад

      We certainly do! I’m open to suggestions.

  • @daemn42
    @daemn42 Год назад

    While this seems easier to tie than the traditional method of chasing the tail over, under, around, and back through.. It seems a little harder to control the size of the loop and length of the tail end. It's easy to get s small loop and a long tail.
    If you twist the bite the counter clockwise and poke the end through before you pull it tight, you'll get a cowboy bowline (tail on the outside of the loop).

  • @jessefarias1507
    @jessefarias1507 Год назад +5

    Don’t forget the bowline is also one of the most efficient knots as for the percentage of working load limit of your line , bowlines are rated at 90% of the WLL

  • @banshong3997
    @banshong3997 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you. Best explanation and way of tying a bowling I have seen

  • @speralta8243
    @speralta8243 Год назад

    Eh, the rabbit still helps me tie this in a second.

  • @parttimelazy4593
    @parttimelazy4593 Год назад +2

    Nice. Give me about 4 minutes to forget this.

  • @jaytalbot1146
    @jaytalbot1146 Год назад

    Cool, now do it with one hand, in the dark, during a gale

  • @Joeyw-2203
    @Joeyw-2203 11 месяцев назад +1

    Great way to tie the bowline. I might finally start using it.

  • @williammorrissey9661
    @williammorrissey9661 Год назад +29

    Love the bowline. But this one looks odd. I can't put my finger on it. It looks like a bowline's cousin or something...

    • @johnrepp1254
      @johnrepp1254 Год назад +8

      I had the same impression. I think it is because at the end in this presentation we are looking at the backside and if it would simply be turned over it would look more like what we are used to seeing.

    • @vwr32jeep
      @vwr32jeep Год назад +4

      He “turns the key”, then pushes a bite through that loop, then the rabbit goes through the hole. In other examples, there is no bite going through the turn-key loop, and the rabbit in the hole, around the tree, and back through the hole. I’m not sure in you end up with the same knot, but this looks different than the other bowlines I see.

    • @justinatest9456
      @justinatest9456 Год назад +7

      This is 100% the bowline. The same as the rabbit and the tree bowline, juat tied in a different, and absolutely better way.
      This method is quicker, impossible to forget or make a mistake, and allows you to tie the knot in tight quarters that you can't see into like the corner of a packed truck bed.

    • @vwr32jeep
      @vwr32jeep Год назад +5

      @@justinatest9456
      You’re right, it’s the way it was tied that threw me off. After watching this I went and watched other videos. A firefighter did a demo using the same technique and called it a “snap bowline”. That led me to another video called 15 bowline variations and he called it the “snap method”, but it’s just a standard bowline.
      You end up with the same knot apparently, but there’s no rabbit chasing in and out of holes and going around trees because the tree comes up through the original turn key loop and that’s the only hole the rabbit has to negotiate. I have to agree with you that it’s a lot easier.

    • @Schubox62
      @Schubox62 Год назад +2

      This one is known as the "Snap" Bowline
      ruclips.net/video/MCKZO65_Zcc/видео.html

  • @RimWulf
    @RimWulf 10 месяцев назад

    Maybe it was the but the photo gave cover photo gave me enough to learn how to tie it while all the others have failed.

  • @robv.7324
    @robv.7324 Год назад

    Wow, never seen it tied that way. Rabbit goes through the hole around the tree and back through the hole...

  • @bradfry5403
    @bradfry5403 Год назад +2

    I would say that the Reef knot is the most famous of all the the knots 🪢

    • @BjerkeRobin
      @BjerkeRobin Год назад +2

      Maybe... it has limited uses though, and can easily be tied wrong which causes it to slip. It also need the ropes to be of similar dimensions and materials.
      The sheet bend is a far superior way of connecting two lengths together. It cannot be tied incorrectly (as it will just fall apart unless correct), can be mosified as a slipknot and can marry ropes of vastly different dimensions without slipping or binding.
      Interestingly, all a bowline is is a sheet bend on the same rope forming a loop ;)

  • @RonOutdoors
    @RonOutdoors Год назад

    Nice I just learned it. Now I put a folded working end through it and I have a hitch. Is that a thing?

  • @nocturnalspecialties642
    @nocturnalspecialties642 Год назад

    Thats easier than the way I learned it

  • @gamingandcraftswithlogan8714
    @gamingandcraftswithlogan8714 9 месяцев назад

    Nobody ties the bowline the same way on youtube. That is very strange.

  • @jackwilson1650
    @jackwilson1650 5 месяцев назад

  • @Thedeadbeetsband
    @Thedeadbeetsband Год назад

    Am I the only one that learned, bunny goes up the hole, bunny goes around the tree, bunny goes back down the tree

  • @johnnielandram4139
    @johnnielandram4139 Год назад +4

    I was taught that this isn't a knot. It is a lashing. Knots bind and the tighter they get the more difficult they are to untie. Lashings get tighter with tension, but are easy to undo because they do not bind. This may or may not be true. It's just how I was taught.

    • @MrAngry3232
      @MrAngry3232 8 месяцев назад

      Well you were taught wrong..

  • @alexanderreyes5749
    @alexanderreyes5749 Год назад

    Bowline on a bite

  • @wrileyeisenman4377
    @wrileyeisenman4377 9 месяцев назад

    I am an Eagle Scout and you go out the hole around the top of the b and back in the hole

  • @amc033067
    @amc033067 Год назад

    My granny took offense to this video.

  • @jesusteama3316
    @jesusteama3316 Год назад

    Glory to GOD in the name of the LORD JESUS CHRIST of Nazareth.
    JESUS CHRIST loves you very much and wants to save you.
    GOD bless and protect you and your whole family always in the name of the LORD JESUS CHRIST.

  • @savedbygrace5436
    @savedbygrace5436 Год назад

    It's basically a slipknot with the other end running through it? Simple enough haha

  • @owemylife
    @owemylife Год назад

    Never seen it tied quite like that. Once you figure it out, you can tie a Bowlin around the falling end of the rope for a running Bowlin. Slip Knott with the same non-binding characteristics.

  • @cat-pd1di
    @cat-pd1di Год назад

    brilliant tutorial wish I would have learned bowline like this many decades ago
    Death To The Rabbit!

  • @smoko7113
    @smoko7113 Год назад

    The perfect loop doesnt exis-

  • @YG-kk4ey
    @YG-kk4ey Год назад

    Can this work with a flat-sided band? Was afraid won't be able to open it.

  • @rhondanolen2223
    @rhondanolen2223 11 месяцев назад

    If you don’t use a this knot you ain’t no cowboy

  • @reeksreeks3017
    @reeksreeks3017 Год назад

    Looking at the final product the rabbit still left a trail out the hole around the tree and back into the hole.

  • @hankdapper8239
    @hankdapper8239 Год назад

    That is the hard way to tie a bow line.
    You need to be able to do it under tension.

  • @Bobcatwill
    @Bobcatwill Год назад

    Bro this is not a bowline knot. What king of Spanish bowline knot parody shenanigans is this

    • @txtoolcrib
      @txtoolcrib  Год назад +1

      I wonder how long it will take for you to remove this idiotic comment.

  • @ABRmessengers
    @ABRmessengers Год назад

    Thats a wierd way to do it lol but yeah looks good

  • @zachtreeguy4345
    @zachtreeguy4345 Год назад

    That's backwards from a standard bowline, and I would think it wouldn't hold as much weight.

    • @txtoolcrib
      @txtoolcrib  Год назад

      Left handed, right handed, upside down……it makes no difference. It is exactly the same knot.

  • @deezynar
    @deezynar Год назад

    The granny knot is the most famous.

  • @user-ju9hg9er8w
    @user-ju9hg9er8w 11 месяцев назад

    Para escalada,esta desaconsejado

  • @emailjwr
    @emailjwr Год назад

    I always said boh-LINE , is it really bowlinn?

  • @JohnBGood1
    @JohnBGood1 Год назад

    Do climbers use this knot with the carabiner that holds their body, as well as they use the figure 8?

    • @txtoolcrib
      @txtoolcrib  Год назад

      Climbers generally use a retraced figure 8.