Page 9 - Jim Whippy - Reeds Knot Handbook
P. 9

IntroductIon



                   s soon as man started to make weapons for hunting
                     and  to  adorn  his  body  with  clothes,  he  needed  to
               A   find ways of securing items and for this he used plant
               fibres and, a little later, catgut. Fibres were used in early crafts
               such  as  basketmaking  and  weaving,  and  man  discovered
               that by tying knots the fibres could be held together more
               securely.
                 Man quickly progressed, using knots to build bridges and
               make shelters and he quickly found more and more uses for
               knots, until they became a vital component of everyday life.
                 Sailors, too, quickly learned the value of various knots
               to secure their rigging, sails and fishing nets. During long
               journeys at sea, sailors would spend much of their spare
               time developing new knots and some of the original names
               used by these men are still in use today.
                 The majority of the knots in this handbook are intended
               for nautical or fishing use and for that reason we have used
               the traditional sailing terms for tying knots:
                 •   the working end – the piece of rope currently being
                  worked.
                 •   in the bight – the middle portion of the rope that
                  you are working on.
                 •   the standing part – the piece of rope that is not
                  currently being worked.
                 •   the end – the part of the rope that is liable to fray if
                  not whipped.
                 •   to dress – to neaten the separate parallel strands,
                  making sure they are free of kinks and twists.

               Most of the knots are tied in rope, cord, twine, yarn or thread,
               depending on their intended purpose.
                 This  book  is  divided  into  six  categories  –  Overhand
               Knots and Hitches, Figure-of-Eight Knots, Bowlines and Bends,



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