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Tie in knots

rgold · · Poughkeepsie, NY · Joined Feb 2008 · Points: 526

The barrel knot (i.e. 1/2 of double fishermans) is the usual finishing knot, tied around the tie-in loop.  A lot of climbers prefer a double bowline (hole the rabbit goes through formed with two turns of rope rather than one).

David K · · The Road, Sometimes Chattan… · Joined Jan 2017 · Points: 423

If the bowline is too complicated, climbing may not be the sport for you.

On an average climb, I:

  • Build an anchor that equalizes three pieces of trad gear.
  • Set up an extended rappel.
Both of these are far more complicated than tying in with a bowline, even the double bowline with a finishing knot.
Tyler Newcomb · · New York, New York | Boston · Joined Dec 2012 · Points: 81
David Kerkeslager wrote: If the bowline is too complicated, climbing may not be the sport for you.

I can certainly agree with that.

I tend to be in the camp that you should have many knots in your arsenal for each use, and az a result I end up having to teach people knots that they should probably know. Like an alpine butterfly to a multipitch trad climber. 
Brian · · North Kingstown, RI · Joined Sep 2001 · Points: 804
David Kerkeslager wrote: If the bowline is too complicated, climbing may not be the sport for you.

I guess it is too complicated for Lynn Hill and John Long.  They should probably quit climbing.  It is not that it is an unsafe knot once tied correctly.  It is just easier to screw up than a Figure 8 which is so easily identifiable.  That's why many gyms don't allow it.  

Abram Herman · · Grand Junction, CO · Joined May 2009 · Points: 20
Brian wrote:

I guess it is too complicated for Lynn Hill and John Long.  They should probably quit climbing.  It is not that it is an unsafe knot once tied correctly.  It is just easier to screw up than a Figure 8 which is so easily identifiable.  That's why many gyms don't allow it.  

Failure to finish a knot is different than not knowing how to tie it. Neither of them finished the knot because they got distracted during the tying process; I'm sure they both knew how to tie the knot.

Many gyms don't allow the bowline because gym employees are often inexperienced, and therefore don't know how to tie or check a bowline.
rgold · · Poughkeepsie, NY · Joined Feb 2008 · Points: 526
Brian wrote:

I guess it is too complicated for Lynn Hill and John Long.  They should probably quit climbing.  It is not that it is an unsafe knot once tied correctly.  It is just easier to screw up than a Figure 8 which is so easily identifiable.  That's why many gyms don't allow it.  

Still in the fake news business in spite of all the explanations to the contrary?  Here's a direct quote from John Long:  “A lot of people are down on the bowline, but the same thing would have happened with a trace-8. I just wasn’t paying attention.”  And from Lynne Hill, "I went out climbing with my husband, and I got distracted when I was tying my knot, I went to get my shoes which were about 20 feet away, and I was talking to a visiting climber, and forgot that I didn't finish my knot."

F Loyd · · Kennewick, WA · Joined Mar 2018 · Points: 808

Exactly, americanalpineclub.org is riddled with incidents of people not completing their tie in or failing to tie the knot right. One guy did an 8 and followed it through without putting the rope through the tie in points!! It was just tucked through his belay loop, just tossed the tied knot through the loop..

Brian · · North Kingstown, RI · Joined Sep 2001 · Points: 804
rgold wrote:

Still in the fake news business in spite of all the explanations to the contrary?  Here's a direct quote from John Long:  “A lot of people are down on the bowline, but the same thing would have happened with a trace-8. I just wasn’t paying attention.”

Would you concede that it is an easier knot to screw up than a Figure 8 especially for all but experienced climbers?

FosterK · · Edmonton, AB · Joined Nov 2012 · Points: 67
rgold wrote: The barrel knot (i.e. 1/2 of double fishermans) is the usual finishing knot, tied around the tie-in loop.  A lot of climbers prefer a double bowline (hole the rabbit goes through formed with two turns of rope rather than one).

Is there an explanation for climber's preferring a double bowline (i.e. two turns)? I'm not sure what it adds to the equation.

Pete Spri · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Jun 2009 · Points: 347
Brian wrote:

Would you concede that it is an easier knot to screw up than a Figure 8 especially for all but experienced climbers?

He already admitted that with the above with the multiparagraph post.  There are more permutations that can happen with a bowline than with an 8 resulting in a bowlin that can fail. And an 8 will always be simpler to check.

Jim Titt · · Germany · Joined Nov 2009 · Points: 490
Pete Spri wrote:

He already admitted that with the above with the multiparagraph post.  There are more permutations that can happen with a bowline than with an 8 resulting in a bowlin that can fail. And an 8 will always be simpler to check.

Why don´t you either actually read what was written or study bowlines more? The permutations of tying a bowline either give a variation (most of which are better and none more likely to fail) OR no knot at all. As far as is known there is no way of tying an "unsafe" bowline.

rgold · · Poughkeepsie, NY · Joined Feb 2008 · Points: 526

I don't know which knot is easier to "screw up."  I've already suggested that you either get nothing or an acceptable knot if you tie a bowline, and you certainly get nothing if you stop tying prematurely.  The figure 8, on the other hand, can be partially retraced.  It will sit on the harness in that condition but may not hold a fall (depending on the amount of retracing completed).  So although I'm not at all sure one can make a meaningful comparison, I'd say the figure 8 is more susceptible to being "screwed up" than a bowline and have the problem go unnoticed.

Lynne Hill might be an example.  She didn't finish tying her knot, yet it stayed on her harness until she got to the chains.  It doesn't seem to be clear whether she had tied a figure 8 or a bowline, but I can't picture any way to not finish tying a bowline and have it stay on your harness while you climb 70 feet, so my guess is she was a victim of a partially-retraced figure 8.

Brian · · North Kingstown, RI · Joined Sep 2001 · Points: 804
rgold wrote: I don't know which knot is easier to "screw up."  I've already suggested that you either get nothing or an acceptable knot if you tie a bowline, and you certainly get nothing if you stop tying prematurely.  The figure 8, on the other hand, can be partially retraced.  It will sit on the harness in that condition but may not hold a fall (depending on the amount of retracing completed).  So although I'm not at all sure one can make a meaningful comparison, I'd say the figure 8 is more susceptible to being "screwed up" than a bowline and have the problem go unnoticed.

Lynne Hill might be an example.  She didn't finish tying her knot, yet it stayed on her harness until she got to the chains.  It doesn't seem to be clear whether she had tied a figure 8 or a bowline, but I can't picture any way to not finish tying a bowline and have it stay on your harness while you climb 70 feet, so my guess is she was a victim of a partially-retraced figure 8.

She wrote in her autobiography that it was a bowline.  I guess she would know more than us.

rgold · · Poughkeepsie, NY · Joined Feb 2008 · Points: 526

Fair enough.  I don't have the book but have seen both knots mentioned in accounts of her accident in other places.

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Edit: Confirmation of Brian's claim from a SuperTopo post by Mal Daly (I've left my subsequent comment unchanged, even though it duplicates Mal's.)

"In a message up thread a few people thought that Lynn Hill had begun to tie in with a figure eight. This is incorrect. In a conversation I had with her a couple of months, we were discussing the "re-threaded" bowline and I asked her about her accident.

The key to Lynn's accident was that there was no knot. She was going to tie a bowline and had threaded the rope through the tie-in loops when she was distracted. When she started climbing the rope was simply threaded through the tie-ins. When I asked he if she thought she would have had that accident if she had been using a fig-8 she thought perhaps not. She thinks that if she had been using a fig-8 that she or her partner may have seen the unthreaded first knot hanging below her jacket and been warned."
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Then the most likely thing is that the rope was just draped through her harness tie-in points and stayed there if she started on a bowline but didn't finish.  It doesn't really matter, as the point is that the knot was unfinished, and  my answer stands, it is more likely for an unfinished a figure eight to go unnoticed as it gives the appearance of being a knot when it isn't.  That's probably the source of knot buddy checks; they were less necessary when everyone used bowlines.  It also suggests that the logic of the claim that bowlines are harder to check is inverted, as the bowline is in much less need of checking.

This is all a distraction, since I believe the only reason for any tie-in failure accident is that a knot was never tied at all or the climber paused while tying it and never finished.  It isn't because the knot was tied "wrong" and then failed, and with that observation, all the silly claims about it being easy to "screw up" a bowline go out the window.  Incomplete knot failures are attention issues, not  knot issues, and pretending that the bowline is at some kind of mystical disadvantage in this regard doesn't stand up to any kind of inspection.

I feel the need to once again assert that I am not arguing that anyone should use any knot other than the one they are comfortable with and can tie competently.  Just lay off the bowline hysteria already and make a rational choice if indeed you feel any need to make a choice.

dullah m · · Elk Grove, CA · Joined Apr 2016 · Points: 0
Brian wrote:

Would you concede that it is an easier knot to screw up than a Figure 8 especially for all but experienced climbers?

I don't agree with this at all. I don't consider myself an "experienced climber" but I wouldn't hesitate for a second to use a bowline, because I learned how to tie it and I pay attention when I tie in. Conversely, I may trip over a curb when I'm walking if I'm not paying attention.

I think the reality is that gyms choose the retraced figure 8 because it is a lot easier to say "check for 5 parallel lines". As for the "simplicity" of the retraced figure 8, I've seen many a n00b struggle repeatedly to tie the initial 8 properly. Any new knot you learn will take practice to tie confidently, comfortably and correctly.

Similarly, it is easier to say tie a stopper knot (for a retraced 8) rather than say "make sure you have enough tail" since "enough tail" requires a judgement call, whereas if you can tie a knot with the tail then you have enough.
David K · · The Road, Sometimes Chattan… · Joined Jan 2017 · Points: 423
Brian wrote:

Would you concede that it is an easier knot to screw up than a Figure 8 especially for all but experienced climbers?

There's not a number of years of climbing where suddenly you can tie the bowline and never screw it up. Either you learn how to tie/finish/check the bowline and are meticulous about doing so, or don't and you're not. The same applies to the figure 8. The same applies to every knot, ever.

EDIT: Toned down the sarcasm a bit.
F Loyd · · Kennewick, WA · Joined Mar 2018 · Points: 808

I just clove hitch my belay loop and send it. Only folks that fall worry about correct knots and protection holding..

Anonymous · · Unknown Hometown · Joined unknown · Points: 0
Floyd Eggers wrote: I just clove hitch my belay loop and send it. Only folks that fall worry about correct knots and protection holding..

I normally just tie the rope around my ankle with an overhand so I can belay my second at the anchor or setup a top rope.

Andrew Hess · · Brooklyn, NY · Joined Aug 2017 · Points: 0
Abdullah Mourad wrote:

I don't agree with this at all. I don't consider myself an "experienced climber" but I wouldn't hesitate for a second to use a bowline, because I learned how to tie it and I pay attention when I tie in.


+1
Both are pretty damn easy to tie. I can think of....well...almost anything else in climbing that is easier to screw up.

Why don't we just tie a bowline and then back it up w/ a rethreaded f8. There. Everyone's happy.
Brian · · North Kingstown, RI · Joined Sep 2001 · Points: 804
rgold wrote: ....  So although I'm not at all sure one can make a meaningful comparison, I'd say the figure 8 is more susceptible to being "screwed up" than a bowline and have the problem go unnoticed.

I agree with everyone who makes the case that a properly tied knot will work fine. I've said that.  It does seem that whenever someone improperly ties a tie-in knot it is a bowline.  Hill and Long are examples.  I Googled accidents with Figure 8s using the search "mis tied figure 8 knot accident" and can't find anything except references to bowlines. With the vast majority of tie-in knots being figure-8s (anecdotal) then why do bowlines get all the bad press?  Fake news?  A conspiracy by bowline haters?  BTW...I exclusively use a bowline for top-rope set-up so I'm not a hater.

Guideline #1: Don't be a jerk.

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