Tomsk
Well-Known Member
Can anyone help me with a knot?
I saw a knot in PBO (I think) a few years ago that would be very useful to me now, but so far have been unable to recreate it..
My problem: I often single hand, and occasionally have to drive against a spring to force my stern out before going astern from my beam on berth. Currently I run a light warp from a rear cleat, along the full length of the boat, through the fairlead, back to a pontoon cleat 1/3 of way down the boats length, back up and through the fairlaid and finally back to the aft cleat. This allows me to drive onto the spring and easily release it from the cockpit without having to let go of the tiller. As you can image this leaves me with a hell of a lot of warp to haul in (in my case about 25 metres) which I'm sure would try to head straight for my prop should anything go wrong!
The knot I saw in PBO was something akin to a 'slip dog'.. a knot that could be release by removing the 'key'. The way I would like to use this would be to run my warp from the rear cleat, forward and through the fairlead and down to the pontoon cleat. A second (short) line runs from the cockpit directly down to the pontoon cleat and through the knot acting as the slip dog. Pulling the short line free releases the warp from the cleat leaving me just a few metres to haul aboard and back down to the cockpit from the forward fairlead with little risk to the prop.
Is this making sense??
I have tried using a wooden key (slip dog) but found that a straight key jammed under tension and a tapered one slipped out under tension...
Can any one remember the format of the knot I am looking for or offer any other solutions?
Many thanks
I saw a knot in PBO (I think) a few years ago that would be very useful to me now, but so far have been unable to recreate it..
My problem: I often single hand, and occasionally have to drive against a spring to force my stern out before going astern from my beam on berth. Currently I run a light warp from a rear cleat, along the full length of the boat, through the fairlead, back to a pontoon cleat 1/3 of way down the boats length, back up and through the fairlaid and finally back to the aft cleat. This allows me to drive onto the spring and easily release it from the cockpit without having to let go of the tiller. As you can image this leaves me with a hell of a lot of warp to haul in (in my case about 25 metres) which I'm sure would try to head straight for my prop should anything go wrong!
The knot I saw in PBO was something akin to a 'slip dog'.. a knot that could be release by removing the 'key'. The way I would like to use this would be to run my warp from the rear cleat, forward and through the fairlead and down to the pontoon cleat. A second (short) line runs from the cockpit directly down to the pontoon cleat and through the knot acting as the slip dog. Pulling the short line free releases the warp from the cleat leaving me just a few metres to haul aboard and back down to the cockpit from the forward fairlead with little risk to the prop.
Is this making sense??
I have tried using a wooden key (slip dog) but found that a straight key jammed under tension and a tapered one slipped out under tension...
Can any one remember the format of the knot I am looking for or offer any other solutions?
Many thanks