Coiling a rope is both a skill and an art. First, it's a skill because no matter how you coil the rope, you should be proficient and it should be easy to uncoil the rope for use. Second, it's an art, because each of us have our own little tricks that we throw into coiling that make a given coil our own.
Mike Barter, the prolific climbing instructional video-maker, has a handful of different rope coiling techniques posted on his youtube channel. The one thing that he neglects to say though, is that before you start in any rope coiling endeavor, you should flake the rope. This first video of an individual doing a butterfly coil in his hand is a great example of someone who skipped the flaking part of the process.
Butterfly coils -- or lap coils, if that's what you prefer -- can be bulky and difficult to deal with when they are in your hand, particularly if you have small hands. In the next video, we will have the opportunity to see the same type of system done over the neck.
Mike calls coiling over the neck the Brit Style, or something like that. I might refer to this instead as simply a butterfly coil over the neck... And I have to say that this is also the way that most American guides coil their ropes. It's very fast and it's very easy once you've put in a bit of practice. The biggest downside is when you have a heavy and wet rope from glacier travel. When that happens it's never fun to coil over your neck...
In each of the preceding videos, it would be easy to convert the ropes, the way that the climbers coiled them, into backpacks. You must simply wrap the two ends of the rope over your shoulders, wrap them around your waist -- capturing the rope behind you -- and then tie them together in front of you. Generally a square knot tends to be the easiest and quickest knot to tie in that position that won't come undone.
Some climbers elect to butterfly a rope as a single strand. This style, sometimes referred to as a French coil, is nice for quick use of the rope. Many will do this when they are sport climbing because if you're good, the rope doesn't necessarily need to be flaked.
In the third video, Mike demonstrates the mountaineers coil. This particular style can be very nice for traveling with a rope. But where it is not nice is in uncoiling it. If you coil or store your rope in this particular fashion, it's very important to remember to uncoil the rope one strand at a time, otherwise things will get very messy.
Unless you always put your rope into a rope bag, coiling is a very important part of climbing. As I say on this blog a lot, practice makes perfect!
--Jason D. Martin
Lưu trữ Blog
-
▼
2010
(3068)
-
▼
tháng 8
(230)
- My Sore Patchanga (and it's not what you think)
- Netflix comes to Apple TV
- Coach Cupcake Charm
- Tennessee Food Round Up
- Vattenlöpning och myggbett
- Golden Eagle Nest Work
- Steve Jobs is Lucifer!
- FeelthemupFriday
- Your Assistance Required
- foxy digitalis
- PHOTOGRAPHY BY AIMEE BRODEUR
- Olé, Y'aaaaaaaaaaaaal
- Speed..
- The numbskull rally
- Cupcake Lip Gloss
- The Mountaineer's Rest Step
- Week Ending August 29
- What DIDN'T I do this weekend.......
- Intensivt
- Comanche Peak Loop
- September and October Climbing Events
- Rosa dygnet
- Waiting for the big reveal
- Summer's end
- Mrs Woog. Fashion Reporter. kind of......
- Playlist - 28th August 2010
- Kallt, höstigt, underbart!
- Saturdays with SawHole # 10
- Cover Photo Contest!
- Guesting
- När man är förkyld får man tröstshoppa!
- MidTown
- Jag var bara tvungen att skriva av mig lite
- We may have to pop your eye out!
- Climbing and Outdoor News from Here and Abroad - 8...
- Netflix now available on your iPhone and iPod touch
- MAGIC KIDS - MEMPHIS
- Giant sticks?
- Missing Day Hiker Walks into Toklat Road Camp
- In the style of a crab.....
- West Village, Charles St.
- Lite halvkrassligt
- Search Underway in Denali National Park for Missin...
- Conditions Report - August 25 2010
- Kidspot Top 50 Blog Your Way To Dunk Island
- My favorite movie- the best of all time
- Week Ending August 22
- Dålig tajming
- Riding Down Manhattan
- At the south edge of central park
- We are the champions
- The Piton
- Sponsored Post- I love Bega as much as my Tupperware.
- PHOTOGRAPHY BY MIKE BAILEY GATES
- Personality test
- Har jag sagt att jag gillar djur föresten?
- Sovdag önskas
- Woog in Profile # 4
- Augmented Metropolis
- Not an election blog
- Insect Repellent
- A STEREOTYPE CLUB 20.8.
- Guest Post: The glamour of writing ;)
- The Expansion of Rick Mahorn
- Söndag, måndag
- Pikes Peak Marathon 2010
- Digestive aids - Mountain Gorilla - BBC Two
- Climbing essentials - Mountain Gorilla - BBC Two
- 7 Nights in Phuket + Giveaway
- Pallet House
- The Trogs may have landed
- August and September Climbing Events
- Swearing, my mother and writing
- Lite suddiga pics
- Hives and valves, filters and membranes
- My Wedding Cupcake Tower
- The Bedforder
- 10km glädje
- Playlist - 21st August 2010
- The Card that Sums Up Joe Kleine's Career
- Weekend Warrior - Videos to get you stoked!
- SUFJAN STEVENS - ALL DELIGHTED PEOPLE
- Jag tror det blir start
- Car Jack Planet
- Saturdays with SawHole # 9
- From the Collection: Basketball & Other edition
- DOWN TOWN
- South Williamsburg along Wythe
- Ratchets for Rescue
- There are Kangaroos in Austria!
- Glass Half Full - Andrew Kirk
- Không có tiêu đề
- Pikes Peak Thoughts
- Längesen vi sågs
- The world has kept moving and I have fallen off
- Icosium tomentosum
- Climbing and Outdoor News from Here and Abroad - 8...
- A STEREOTYPE CLUB : BIG WAVE RIDERS - "SKATE OR DIE"
- Descent into hell TGIF
- Waxing Lyrical About Sales People
-
▼
tháng 8
(230)