Clove hitch

Clove hitch
CategoryHitch
OriginAncient
RelatedSlippery hitch, Two half-hitches, Buntline hitch, Cow hitch, Constrictor knot, Ground-line hitch, Lashings, Snuggle hitch
Typical useSecuring lines running along a series of posts, belaying, starting lashings, weak binding
CaveatCan spill if the standing part is pulled forcibly in the wrong direction
ABoK#11, #53, #69, #70, #204, #400, #421, #437, #1176, #1177, #1178, #1179, #1180, #1245, #1773, #1774, #1775, #1776, #1778, #1779, #1814, #2079, #2541, #2542, #2543, #2544, #2546, #2547, #2548
Instructionshttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pwdZTHu5rTI

The clove hitch is an ancient type of knot, made of two successive single hitches[1]: 283  tied around an object. It is most effectively used to secure a middle section of rope to an object it crosses over,[1]: 213  such as a line on a fencepost. It can also be used as an ordinary hitch, or as a binding knot, but it is not particularly secure in either application.[1]: 18, 224  It is considered one of the most important knots, alongside the bowline and the sheet bend.

Although the name clove hitch is given by Falconer in his Dictionary of 1769, the knot is much older, having been tied in ratlines at least as early as the first quarter of the sixteenth century. This is shown in early sculpture and paintings. A round turn is taken with the ratline and then a hitch is added below. The forward end is always the first to be made fast.

  1. ^ a b c d Ashley, Clifford Warren (1944). The Ashley Book of Knots. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. ISBN 9780385040259.