The Rolling hitch is a knot used to attach a rope to a rod, pole, or other rope. A simple friction hitch, it is used for lengthwise pull along an object rather than at right angles. The Rolling hitch is designed to resist lengthwise movement for only a single direction of pull.
The following image is from Pro-Knots which produces plastic, easy to use knot cards. I have one of these for fishing knots and carry it with me in my boat bag just in case I need a quick reference.
Most of my dealings with this knot have been in rock climbing but this knot can be used anytime there is a need for a stopper knot or to splice to ropes together.. There two types of figure eight knots.
Double figure-of-eight knot is used like an overhand loop knot. This type of knot can be used in prusik climbing when used in conjunction with a Swiss seat, a climbing rope, and locking carabineer designed for climbing.
Figure-of-eight splice knot is used to quickly and effectively splice two ropes of equal, or unequal diameter together. This knot consists of a loose figure-of-eight knot made in one rope, and feeding the lesser diameter of the two back through the figure eight starting from the original knot’s running end and retracing the rope through the figure eight until the second ropes running end is parallel with the first’s ropes standing end, essentially creating a figure-of-eight within a figure-of-eight. This can be a permanent or temporary approach to splicing ropes together and the anatomy of this knot allows two ropes to be spliced without slipping, however, it causes strength loss as with most knots.
The following image is from Pro-Knots which produces plastic, easy to use knot cards. I have one of these for fishing knots and carry it with me in my boat bag just in case I need a quick reference.
The half hitch is simple knot and is basically a variation of the overhand knot. If the half hitch is tied by itself, it slips very easily and cannot hold anything. However, the half hitch occurs as a component in many more complicated knots to bind the standing part of the rope to the opposite end. This knot was used twice in the standing end of the Trucker’s Hitch to bind the knot to prevent the rope from slipping.
Several weeks ago, I posted “Knot Today” which discussed seven outdoor knots that everyone should know. With the summer coming, many of us are going to be breaking out the canoes and kayaks and floating or padding our favorite waters. I don’t know how others travel with their favorite water craft, but mine in on top of my truck shell tied down with ratchet straps. Before ratchet straps and cam straps, many had to use just regular rope and the trucker’s hitch.
“The trucker’s hitch, also known as the power cinch, is a self-binding knot commonly used for securing loads on trucks or trailers. There are several variations of the knot, all of which use a loop in the standing part of the rope as a make-shift pulley in order to obtain a 3 to 1 mechanical advantage. The version depicted here has the advantage that it can be tied anywhere in the rope (without access to an end). Once tight, the knot is secured with a half hitch, usually slipped for easy releasing.” – Wikipedia
The following image is from Pro-Knots which produces plastic, easy to use knot cards. I have one of these for fishing knots and carry it with me in my boat bag just in case I need a quick reference.
In an earlier post about national fly fishing communities, I mentioned FFF, other organization is Trout Unlimited. Trout Unlimited’s mission is to conserve, protect and restore North America’s coldwater fisheries and their watersheds. To date, TU has more than 150,000 members in about 400 chapters from Maine to Montana to Alaska.
In July 2009, TU will celebrate the anniversary of TU’s founding from the banks of the Au Sable River near Grayling, Michigan. From the beginning, TU was guided by the principle that if we “take care of the fish, then the fishing will take care of itself.” And that principle was grounded in science.
The Nashville local chapter of TU, Cumberland Chapter, has monthly meetings with guest speakers covering different topics on fly fishing and/or conservation of trout fisheries. As a member, you receive a monthly newsletter from the local chapter and four times a year, the national organization sends out a magazine called Trout. Trout provides information on conservation of fishery habitats and general information on fly fishing.
“From its hundreds of local stream restoration projects, to helping lead the way to remove the Edwards Dam on the Kennebec River in Maine, to compelling Congress to strengthen the Clean Water Act, TU has a strong 50 year track record of conservation achievements. Perhaps TU’s greatest strength is that it works at multiple levels of society and government to achieve its mission. From the landowner on the stream bank, to the state fisheries agency, to the Halls of Congress, TU is working to achieve its vision.”
The guys from AEG, who brought you Trout Bum Diaries: Patagonia and Trout Bum Diaries II: Kiwi Camo, are back. For two months the guys travel to five rivers that potentially no other fisherman has floated down in search of a mysterious fish. Their travels in this fly fishing adventure movie take them into inner Mongolia by horse, camel, Russian military vans, and hiking boot in search of the taimen, also known to Mongolians as River Wolf.
Taimen is the largest fish species in the salmon family. In the natural environment, without pressure, taimen can grow in excess of five feet in length and weight as much as 75 pounds. The have eyes that are centered more towards the front of the head which allows them to see prey below and above the water. This allows them to find and eat other fish species as well as mice, prairie dogs, and small water fowl and with rows and rows of teeth, they have no problem taking on that task.
At first they guys have a hard time locating taimen. What does taimen water look like? Where do they hold up in the river? These are the questions the guys have to answer during their 14 to 20 km river floats. In the beginning, the crew is catching lenok, which is the Mongolian equivalent to trout. The crew tried a multitude of flies: tungsten head streamers, top water streamers, giant grasshoppers, and so on, but all they could catch was lenok. It wasn’t until one guy had on a lenok and after releasing the fish back to the river, a giant taimen come out of nowhere and ate the fish. That is when the guys realize that they were not fishing flies that were big enough.
The movie has some spectacular views of the mountains and rivers of Mongolia as well as plenty fly fishing footage. The guys spend their nights sleeping in tents or on the ground, drinking beer, tying flies, and fly fishing for the mysterious River Wolf and once again the deliver a great fly fishing adventure movie. I can’t wait until the next movie.
I am your typical weekend warrior. I work all week to play hard on the weekend. I used to do a lot of backpacking, but now
I am the fly fishing river warrior. The one thing that has not changed with the switch from backpacking to fly fishing / kayaking is restroom breaks. For guys most of the time it is easy, but there are those instances when guys and gals are looking for that tree to hunker down by.
Last month I received The Outhouse from Sea To Summit for review. Simply put, The Outhouse is waterproof dry bag for toilet paper. The Outhouse retails for about $14.95, which makes this very affordable, so you can throw away that old zip lock bag. The bag is made of rip-stop nylon with an interior material to prevent water coming through the bag. Attached to the top of the bag is a cord that allows the user to hang the bag near the “dumping” ground or around your neck.
Inside the bag there nylon tubing that has a hard insert that the toilet paper slides into that is similar to a home toilet paper dispenser which makes it easy to pull off the TP when needed. Plus this allows the bag to stay open while hanging and the TP will not fall out of the bag and roll away from the user, which could create an awkward moment for a fellow hiker. At the bottom of the bag, there is a closure similar to all dry bags; a nylon buckle and hard plastic piece to turn over and over to seal the bag.
I tested this product in shower to see how it would withstand a “rain shower”. I mistakenly used a double roll of TP, which made the bag hard to seal and after the shower, water was inside the bag and the TP was slightly wet. After realizing my mistake, I replaced the double roll with a single roll and The Outhouse perform exceptionally well in the “rain shower”. I tested the The Outhouse hanging while open and sealed tight. The Outhouse is now a permanent fixture in the boat bag.
The Outhouse would work great on multiple night backcountry trips where a “restroom” is established. You can leave The Outhouse in the elements and not have to worry about water ruining the precious paper.
I was sitting at home the other night writing some future posts on several knots that a fisher or fly fisher should know. I began looking of instruction of these knots and I was coming across all kinds of other knots that could be use for tying down a kayak or canoe, and knots for other uses. I spoke with Wade and we are going to pass along some knots that are useful in the outdoors from an Improved Clinch Knot, Bowline Knot, Truckers Knot, and so on.
I was looking at different websites and came across a site which listed the seven most useful outdoor knots that every outdoors person should know. The seven knots are the Trucker’s Hitch, Two Half Hitches, Figure Eight, Rolling Hitch, Bowline, Tautline Hitch, and Improved Clinch Knot. To start out the knot series, Outdoorzy will present you the instructions on how to tie each of these knots, after that there will various other knots, hitches, and bends useful for fishing, camping, climbing, and other outdoor sports. Before the knot series begins, I thought I would go over some basic knot knowledge and definitions.
Tag End – The part of the line in which the knot is tied. The tag end is used to denote the short excess line that remains after a knot is tied. In fishing, this would be the portion that is trimmed.
Standing Part – The main part of the rope not in the knot itself, the rope not being tied is the standing part.
Seating a knot is simply tightening the knot by removing the excess line. A smooth, continuous pulling motion is best; not a jerking motion.
For fishing knots, it is important to lubricate or wet the knot when the knot is seated. Lubricating the knot prevents friction or heat, which can leaken the leader or tippet.
Knowing the several knots is always useful information, you never know when you will need to tie a rope to a tarp to make an impromptu tent, tie to pieces of rope together, tie down a canoe or kayak down to a vehicle. I hope you enjoy and find the new series helpful.
The MTFF Fly of the Month for April 2008 is the Emergent Sparkle Caddis Pupa. When caddis are ready to hatch they leave their pupal cocoon and get ready for the accent to the surface of the water. Most species exude gases from their newly formed adult body. This gas is trapped by the old pupal skin which still surrounds them. This process starts to separate the adult insect from this pupal shuck. The shuck is inflated forming a bubble or balloon around parts of the adult insect. These gases within this bubble reflect light. Each caddis pupa becomes a reflective buoyant orb as it swims and rises to the surface.
Gary LaFontaine in his revolutionary book Caddisflies, noted that these reflective qualities made the caddis pupa highly visible to trout. The bubble becomes a key target for feeding fish. His answer was the Sparkle Pupa Series of flies. They are tied with a bubble of Antron fibers around the body to trap air and reflect light much the same as the real insect. The Sparkle Pupa Series of flies revolutionized fly fishing during a number of important caddis hatches. - www.flyfishusa.com
Emergent Sparkle Caddis Pupa
Hook: TMC 100; Size 12 to 18
Thread: To match underbody
Overbody: To match underbody Sparkle Yarn
Underbody: Half Sparkle Yarn and half fur
Tail: Clipped Sparkle yarn from the Overbody
Wing: Deer Hair
Head: Dubbed Fur or Wrapped Marabou fibers
The North River Outing with MTFF is one of my favorite outings of the year. Every March, the club heads up to Tellico Plains, TN to do a little dry fly fishing for rainbows, browns, and brookies in the small mountains streams of east Tennessee. This year would be no different. Before my trip to the mountains, I made sure to have all of my dry flies: Caddis, Adams, Blue Wing Olives, and Stoneflies. I grabbed several fly rods, a two weight for the brookies, a four weight for the rainbows and browns, and a six weight just in case we fish the Tellico River. The club camps out at a group campground and a few other stay at a cabin. Lucky for me, my fishing buddy’s family owns the cabin, so naturally I stayed at the cabin with a few others. We also have a pot-luck dinner on Saturday night with this outing which is real nice. Everyone gets together to talk about the day and swap old fishing stories.
Friday was the first day of fishing. I left Nashville at 3:30 in the morning to make the three and half to four hour drive to Tellico Plains. I arrived at the cabin about shortly around 8:00. Scott and his wife were still sleeping but Stan was up and getting ready for the day. So I unpacked my truck and waited for the others to rise and get moving. When I am fishing back on my home waters, I am usually on the water at 6:30 AM, and fish in the net within in the first 30 minutes if I am not paddling up the river. But in the mountains, it is a different story. An angler can actually sleep in because the sun needs to come out, warm up the air and the waters some. When this happens, bugs will begin to come off the water and hopefully the fish will begin to feed.
We hit the North River around 11:00 and soon after that the rain came. It rained off and on all day and it didn’t stop until that night. We fished that afternoon some of the higher elevations of the mountains, but not in the brookie water. Scott, Stan, Vernon, and I, (Scott’s wife stayed back at the cabin), split up on the small mountain stream giving each other a hundred yards or so of separation so that we could all fish and be to ourselves and this is typical when fishing in large groups on the mountain. I managed to get a handful of strikes on a caddis adult dry fly but I only hooked up on one, a small rainbow. We fished the rest of the day with little success in numbers of fish, but everyone did catch a rainbow.
Saturday morning the weather was nice and clear. Scott gave a dry fly fishing class at the campground and on the stream. Scott has been doing this for the last four years or so. Soon after the class, the rains came again, but this time, it was followed up by thunder and lightning. We were able to fish a little bit but not much. During spells of rain, we tried to fish the upper end of the river for some brookies; Stan has never caught a brookie, so we wanted to get him one. We separated out again. I fished the river near the vehicle, and Stan and Scott went down the river a small piece. I caught a nice three or four inch brookie within the first fifteen minutes, and I am sad to report, Stan did not his brookie.
After the rains kicked up again, we packed up and started to head back for the cabin, along the way, Scott asked Stan, “If he had ever seen the (Indian Boundary) lake?” When we pulled up to the lake, the rain was gone, the skies were calm, the wind was gentle and there were fish hitting bugs on the top of the water. We all grabbed our gear and set out to catch whatever would eat our flies. I was the first to catch a fish, a small bluegill about four or five inches in length. Next Stan pulled in a nice bluegill and shortly after that Scott had a nice bluegill on the end of his line. We continued fishing without much luck and just before we decided to go, Stan had another fish on, but this time is was about a seven or eight inch bass. We didn’t get to fish much longer, the winds began to kick up, the water was choppy, and a storm was on its way. We packed up for the final time that day and headed back to the cabin.
We did have the potluck dinner that night, but not at the campground. Scott invited the campers up to the cabin to cook and eat there and not have to worry about a fire, rain, or wind. There was plenty of food to go around. There was chicken, salmon, chili, hotdogs, a casserole, and several desserts. No one went to bed hungry.
I had a meeting to attend on Sunday, so I packed my belongings up early, cleaned a bit of the cabin and headed back to Nashville. There were not as many people on the North River Outing this year as in years past, but fun was had by all who attended the event. I can’t wait until next year to fish the North River again.