Muggs
Been here much more than a while
- Location
- Canuckistan
Daisy Chain cinches down tight, this is much easier to pull down using the tail.
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I’ve also done the 2x half hitches down the eye of the bowline. It’s a clean finish that still maintains the look of a bowline. Very little room for confusion IMO.Same here with the y finish. That and the voice in the back of my head always associate it with a slippery. For base ties I’ll use a pair of half hitches tied to the eye of the bowline.
The very rare time I’ll do a canopy tie (90+% conifer work in fairly heavily wooded areas) I’ll snap a carabiner in the spiced eye and snap it to the working leg below the bowline.
This is with the hope that if I ever need it someone could at least identify the setup.

I often tie a Bowline WITH a bight when base anchoring somewhere mid-line. When my rope is too long for the tree height at that moment amd I choose to tune how much rope I have on the climbing side, I go with the BWB.Bowline on a bite is a knot of its own. Bowline WITH a bite is simply a Bowline tied with a bite and is the canopy anchor that I use most often. I find a butterfly very impractical.
That's an angle worth consideringI used a rope-only canopy anchor yesterday.
Bowline on a bight with tie-off.
I had a cluster of branches... wasn't sure how a biner or quickie would rest once the rope was choked up from the ground.
Yea, that's what I rock 99% of the time. I love that giant fuckin knotI often tie a Bowline WITH a bight when base anchoring somewhere mid-line. When my rope is too long for the tree height at that moment amd I choose to tune how much rope I have on the climbing side, I go with the BWB.
I capture all legs, so the first twist rolled into the line is made of 2 legs and the bight is followed through that. It makes what looks like a large bowline and to me it looks cleaner than running the bight through a single eye.
The Bowline ON a bight is probably less seldom used for me.
Has the "Maverick Hitch" been discussed yet? It is not showing up in my search attempts.
Only one post found by search that contains that exact phrase so I may need a bit more help to find the detailed discussions.Many "remote release anchor" approaches have been discussed in great detail on the Buzz over the years.
It would be worth searching the Buzz on that term.
-AJ
I’ll look more closely at it, thxOnly one post found by search that contains that exact phrase so I may need a bit more help to find the detailed discussions.
As you have innovated in this area, and since apparently the "Maverick" was not part of this discussion unless it already existed by another name, what is your evaluation of it?
Only one post found by search that contains that exact phrase so I may need a bit more help to find the detailed discussions.
As you have innovated in this area, and since apparently the "Maverick" was not part of this discussion unless it already existed by another name, what is your evaluation of it?
as has been previously mentioned, I think several folks are talking about making a bowline with a bight, which after backing it up is a huge fucking knot. Even when working, you end up having to pull your tail all the way up and over fairly regularly, so feeding it into a butterfly or bowline-on-bight shouldn't demotivate you to use the tried and true. Use as short a rooe as you can get away with, and bag your tail and keep it with you when possible to make many maneuvers easier@moss the two features that caught my eye are
I don't know how to do the first with a bowline if that is possible. A bowline-on-a-bight requires passing the bight back over the entire knot so I think it is not possible to trap the other side of the rope in the two-strand loop that is formed.
- It can be tied mid-line without access to either end of the rope
- The exploding release
The second I thought would interest you. It appears to use less rope than yours from 2015 as only one strand passes around the stem or limb. For me it is a curiosity that I don't yet know if or where I would use.
@moss the two features that caught my eye are
I don't know how to do the first with a bowline if that is possible. A bowline-on-a-bight requires passing the bight back over the entire knot so I think it is not possible to trap the other side of the rope in the two-strand loop that is formed.
- It can be tied mid-line without access to either end of the rope
- The exploding release
The second I thought would interest you. It appears to use less rope than yours from 2015 as only one strand passes around the stem or limb. For me it is a curiosity that I don't yet know if or where I would use.
Yes, I am familiar with some of these: FiddleStick, Escaper, SandTrap.In "Canyoning" climbers are much more interested in exploding knot remote releases, if you poke around in that community online you'll see some interesting approaches.
you got a video of how you tie that one? That's quite different from what I call tying a bowline with a bight.Bowline with a bight, with a tail tuck