Halter hitch
Halter hitch | |
---|---|
Category | Hitch |
Related | Falconer's knot, Slippery hitch, Siberian hitch |
Releasing | Quick-release |
Typical use | tethering animals |
ABoK | #243, #1715, #1804, #1826 |
The halter hitch is a type of knot used to connect a rope to an object. As the name implies it is useful in tying the lead rope, which is attached to the halter, to a post or hitching rail. The benefit of the halter hitch is that it can be released by pulling on one end of the rope. Even if there is tension on the rope, it can still be released with ease. Some sources show the knot being finished with the free end running through the slipped loop to prevent it from working loose or being untied by a clever animal, still allowing easy but not instant untying.[1][2]
Tying
- Halter hitch 1 : Place rope behind, through or around anchor object. Form a loop in the working part of the rope.
- Halter hitch 2 : Pull a bight of the working part behind the standing part and then through the loop formed in first step.
Difference from similar hitches with the same purpose
The halter hitch is topologically the same knot as the Falconer's knot, i. e. a slipped overhand knot around the main part.[3] The falconer has to tie the same knot one handed, throwing the end around the anchor object (the perch), gripping it with a scissoring fingers act, pulling the bight from opposite side of the main part using the back of the thumb.
- Falconer's knot 1 : Pinching fingers from below, hooking thumb from above
- Falconer's knot 2 : Hand rotated counterclockwise in a "GO AWAY" sign from below
- Falconer's knot 3 : End bight scissored between fingers to thumb loop
- Falconer's knot 4 : End bight slipped through loop around thumb
- Falconer's knot 5 : Tightened by pulling main part, pushing the knot
- Falconer's knot 6 : Locked with free end through slip
The halter hitch is similar to other slipped hitches that wrap the main part with small differences:
- The Siberian hitch is one where the bight for the slip is twisted one more time i.e. a slipped Figure-eight knot around the main part. Stronger, traditionally used to tie a horse or reindeer by evenks in Siberia, tied with a method suitable for tying while wearing a glove.
- The Slippery hitch and Buntline hitch are essentially a slipped Clove hitch around the main part. Slippery hitch has the slip placed under the last turn away from the main part, while Buntline hitch has the slip placed under the last turn towards the main part. Easy to tie, secure, easy to untie, Slippery hitch is used several in a row on square-rigged ships for securing the gaskets that bind stowed sails to the yards on top, while Buntline hitch, stronger but more difficult to untie, is used slipped to secure the bottom of open sail.
- The half hitch with slip is one with no extra bight, no extra turn, just a slip inside the half hitch, much weaker than all of the above hitches.
- Siberian hitch
- Slippery hitch
- Untightened slipped buntline hitch
- Half hitch with slip
See also
References
- ↑ Ashley, Clifford W. (1944). "The Ashley Book of Knots". New York: Doubleday: 305
- ↑ Elser, Smoke; Brown, Bill (1980). Packin' in on Mules and Horses. Missoula: Mountain Press. pp. 111–113. ISBN 0-87842-127-0.
- ↑ Parry-Jones, Jemima (1994). Training Birds of Prey. David & Charles. p. 73. ISBN 0-7153-1238-3.
External links
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