| [College of ACES] | [University of Illinois] | [Illinois CES] |
Grab your copy of The Ashley Book of Knots, you DO have a copy don't you? No? Every rigger should have one on the shelf. Go to page 518, top left. I will quote Ashley first:
"3114. HALF HITCHING (HH): Unless put around a rope, this is really single hitching but is commonly called "half hitching". It is a method of lashing in which a series of SINGLE HITCHES is employed to secure one or several objects, and it is universally used in tying up parcels, bundles and bales.
3115. MARLINE HITCHING (MH) is used to secure parceling on standing rigging. It is preferred to half hitching, as service lies over it more smoothly. It is also used in lacing the foot and heads of fore-and-aft sails to booms and gaffs and in lashing hammocks. It is firmer than half hitching. The difference in construction between the two may be illustrated by tying a series on a cylinder and then slipping them off the end. HALF HITCHING spills instantly and completely, whereas MARLINE HITCHING resolves itself into a series of OVERHAND KNOTS."
To tie the MH and HH get two pop, soda for the East coast, bottles and two shoe laces about three feet long. Tie a running bowline around the necks of both bottles and let the laces hang. The HH is tied by passing the lace around the bottle then, when it somes back to the front, it goes UNDER the piece of rope that exited the bowline. The MH is tied by passing the lace around the bottle then, when the it comes back in front, it goes OVER the piece of rope that exited the bowline.
While I was preparing this post I played with the laces on my soda bottles and found a little difference in use. With a HH it acted like a bit of a choker and the HH would tighten up but would roll down the bottle in the same fashion as dropping a chunk from rigging. If the rope stretched too much when the piece hit the the pulley, or too much slack was left, the HH could roll right off the butt. The MH would tighten too but it does not seem to roll down the bottle. That is why a MH is recommended for a back up to a running bowline.
Take the time to tie these with a bottle or a small chunk, you will see a difference.
Arborists are Johnny-Come-Latelys to rigging and rope work. It is necessary to look back every once in a while to see what our ancestors did and take those skills forward in whole, not just by pieces. Naming knots correctly and tieing them correctly is just as important as making collar cuts and not over-pruning trees.
Strong limbs and snug ropes!
Tom