Page 32 - Alpheus Hyatt Verrill "Knots, Splices and Rope-Work"
P. 32

CHAPTER IV





                   NOOSES, LOOPS AND MOORING KNOTS

                   Nothing is more interesting to a landsman than the manner in which a sailor handles
                   huge, dripping hawsers or cables and with a few deft turns makes then fast to a pier-head
                   or spile, in such a way that the ship's winches, warping the huge structure to or from the
                   dock, do not cause the slightest give or slip to the rope and yet, a moment later, with a
                   few quick motions, the line is cast off, tightened up anew, or paid out as required.

                   Clove hitches, used as illustrated in Fig. 55, and known as the "Waterman's Knot," are
                   often used, with a man holding the free end, for in this way a slight pull holds the knot
                   fast, while a little slack gives the knot a chance to slip without giving way entirely and
                   without exerting any appreciable pull on the man holding the end.
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