Farmer's loop
Appearance
Farmer's loop | |
---|---|
Names | Farmer's loop, Wireman's knot[1] |
Category | Loop |
Related | Alpine butterfly knot, Artillery loop, Span loop |
Releasing | Non-jamming |
Typical use | Climbing, agriculture |
ABoK | #1054, #1056, #2565 |
The farmer's loop is a knot which forms a fixed loop.[2] As a midline loop knot made with a bight, it is related to several other similar knots, including the alpine butterfly knot and artillery loop.
History
Cornell University professor Howard W. Riley published this knot in an agricultural extension pamphlet devoted to farming knots in 1912.[2] He was shown the knot by a farmer at the 1910 Genesee County Fair in Bativia, New York. Riley noted that he had never seen the knot described in any reference book.[3]
See also
References
- ^ Department of the Army (2002), Field Manual No. 3-97.61 Military Mountaineering, Washington, D.C: United States Government, p. 4.16
- ^ a b Ashley, Clifford W. (1944), The Ashley Book of Knots, New York: Doubleday, p. 191
- ^ Riley, Howard W. (January 1912). "Knots, Hitches, and Splices". The Cornell Reading-Courses. Rural Engineering Series No. 1. 1 (8). Ithaca, NY: New York State College of Agriculture at Cornell University: 1438. Retrieved 2011-11-08. As collected in Documents of the Assembly of the State of New York, 136th Session, 1913, Vol. 19, No. 29, Part 5.
External links