Page 89 - Nate Fitch, Ron Funderburke "Climbing Knots"
P. 89

CHAPTER 8


       Managing the Rope



           60m or 70m rope can be an unwieldy and
       A  chaotic mess if it is not properly managed. The
       slipknot is almost always the culprit. As a rope unfurls
       from its pile or its coils, it is perfectly natural for one
       bight of the rope to be pulled through an incidental
       loop in the stack or the pile. As one clustered slip-
       knot mingles with the rest of the pile, slipknots can
       naturally be created within slipknots, and so the mess
       begins. Thankfully, the rope can be managed with a
       few simple techniques.
          In this chapter we will discuss flaking a rope out
       for its initial use, techniques for managing a rope
       while belaying, and coiling a rope for transport.


       Flaking a Rope

       The initial treatment of a rope is an important step.
       It has a few important purposes. First, a rope that has
       been transported in a rope bag or bucket, or even
       in a tight single-strand coil, is not guaranteed to pay
       out smoothly to a belayer. Flaking a rope prepares it
       for use. Second, flaking provides an opportunity for
       the climbing team to inspect (visually and physically)
       every inch of the rope. Severe abrasion in the sheath,
       exposure of core strands, breaks, gaps, and weaknesses
       all should be avoided. So flaking a rope is a logical
       time to find any signs of rope damage. Lastly, flaking
       a rope allows the climbing team to retrieve the rope


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