How to tie a gazebo knot

Author: Carl Weaver
Date Of Creation: 23 February 2021
Update Date: 1 July 2024
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Knots for Tarp Set-Up
Video: Knots for Tarp Set-Up

Content

1 Use this symbolism "rabbit" and "tree" to make it easier to remember how the knot is tied. Imagine that the loop of the rope is a "rabbit's mink", the end of the rope extending from the loop will be a "tree". The second free end of the rope in your right hand is a rabbit. The rabbit goes over the hole, runs around the tree and returns down to the burrow.
  • To remember in another way how the knot is knitted in rhyme:

    "Roll up the rope by making a loop
    Behind your back, stretch around the waist
    Stretch upward, around its axis
    Pull tight and lower "
  • 2 So, hold one end of the rope in your left hand. This is your fixed end of the rope (taking into account the already made loop "mink" and the extension of the rope, our "tree"). Use your right hand to use the free end of the rabbit to tie the knot. We make a small loop with the end of the rope in your left hand, and a “rabbit” comes out of this hole.
    • According to the instructions, you start with a finished loop, so that when you cross the free end of the rope, a new loop is formed.
  • 3 Pull the "rabbit" rope with your right hand through the loop in your left hand "mink". The closest end of the rope goes through the loop. Think of the "rabbit" going through the "burrow."
  • 4 Wrap the "rabbit" around so that it stays behind the main rope, that is (a continuation of our "tree".) Pull the rabbit back down into the mink loop. This time the end will be the far end.
  • 5 Take the loose rope in your left hand, hold the other end with your right. And pull the ends in the opposite direction to tighten the knot.
  • Method 2 of 3: Tie a sliding bow knot

    1. 1 Knock over your rope around something to tie a knot around. In particular, you will need this method if you are in a boat and need to tie it to a pole or pile. Also, this method is convenient for attaching a rope to a pole in various situations, such as hanging a hammock.
    2. 2 Form a loop with the movable end of the rope. The movable end is not tied to a boat or horse, etc. This end is needed to tie the knot. Make a large, loose loop so that the end of the rope hangs over the fixed end of the rope (to the part of the rope to which the knot will be tied).
    3. 3 Pull the free end around the fixed edge so as to go around the fixed edge of the rope, and then pull the end we want back up from under it.
    4. 4 Pull the free end of the rope through the loop you made earlier. The free end goes through the loop and around the fixed part of the rope that you have already looped.
    5. 5 Pull the tip back through the loop. The end should go down into it after you have pulled it up the rope. Pull the end of the rope so that it protrudes about 5 cm.
    6. 6 Tighten the fixed end of the rope to secure the knot.
    7. 7 Once the knot is in the middle, pull on the fixed edge to make the knot tighter.

    Method 3 of 3: Untie the bowling knot

    1. 1 Untie the bowline knot. No matter how tight the knot is, you can make as many movements as possible to bring everything back.
    2. 2 Find where the movable end of the rope is tied to the fixed part. The movable end is the end with which you knitted the knot (the aforementioned "rabbit"). The fixed end of the rope is our aforementioned "tree" around which the "rabbit" is wrapped. The place where the "rabbit" wraps around the tree forms a cross.
    3. 3 Press down on the knot with your thumbs. Push the knot so that the loop moves away from the knot so that the back of the knot breaks apart. This will loosen the knot in the loop held by the movable end of the rope and allow you to untie the knot.
    4. 4 Open the ends of the rope when the knot looses. It will be easier if you push the two parts of the knot together, the tension will be removed and you can easily separate the ends of the rope.

    Tips

    • If you are a Jaws fan, you may remember Quint's instructions: “A small brown eel comes out of the cave ... Swims into the cave ... Passes from the inside ... And returns to the cave again.
    • For safety reasons, the free end should be no shorter than 12 rope turns.

    Warnings

    • Do not use this unit for heavy loads or climbing.
    • The knot will not come loose as long as there is weight at the end of the rope.