I appreciate your channel for the diversity of climbing videos, existing hitches and JRB original hitch videos, the practical application of those hitches, and how you clearly explain each step in anything you do. Well done. Just wanted to say thanks!
Appreciate that. When i look at some of the earliest ones I created a couple years ago, I am embarrassed for leaving out details or clumbsy presentation, or bad lighting or whatever. And so I am trying be more thorough... and create something i can look back on and be proud of... and something that will have lasting benefit to a lot of friends. Getting your feedback helps reinforce me and I appreciate it.
Thanks, John. I asked about 1 month ago on your first or second Longhorn video when you showed the knot tied to your 523 ascender if you could teach it. I appreciate you and all of your videos. Thanks for all you do. You have a youtube friend and fan here.
Thanks! Right, yes, I remember. I am frequently trying and testing stuff for many months before i publish it just so that I can learn everything i can about it. For example, there's an experimental friction hitch in this clip. I don't know I will publish that one, but I do have another one that's ahead of it in the pipeline and I will show you that one very soon.
Could you possibly use this on the end of a rope like an eye? By tying the rope to it with a fishing knot and then have an eye you can open and bypass limbs.
Jason, you could use the Longhorn Soft Shackle as a substitute for a Quick Link in a canopy anchor. However, what you call a "fishing knot" is probably meant to be Poachers Knot (Google it) and although it would take a lot of force to fail, that could pull the Shackle inside of it. The Poachers knot should only be tied on a rigid host like a carabiner. But if ya use an Alpine Butterfly or a Figure 8 end loop, then absolutely, it's viable.
I appreciate your channel for the diversity of climbing videos, existing hitches and JRB original hitch videos, the practical application of those hitches, and how you clearly explain each step in anything you do. Well done. Just wanted to say thanks!
Appreciate that. When i look at some of the earliest ones I created a couple years ago, I am embarrassed for leaving out details or clumbsy presentation, or bad lighting or whatever. And so I am trying be more thorough... and create something i can look back on and be proud of... and something that will have lasting benefit to a lot of friends. Getting your feedback helps reinforce me and I appreciate it.
Thanks, John.
I asked about 1 month ago on your first or second Longhorn video when you showed the knot tied to your 523 ascender if you could teach it. I appreciate you and all of your videos. Thanks for all you do. You have a youtube friend and fan here.
Thanks! Right, yes, I remember. I am frequently trying and testing stuff for many months before i publish it just so that I can learn everything i can about it. For example, there's an experimental friction hitch in this clip. I don't know I will publish that one, but I do have another one that's ahead of it in the pipeline and I will show you that one very soon.
Could you possibly use this on the end of a rope like an eye? By tying the rope to it with a fishing knot and then have an eye you can open and bypass limbs.
Jason, you could use the Longhorn Soft Shackle as a substitute for a Quick Link in a canopy anchor. However, what you call a "fishing knot" is probably meant to be Poachers Knot (Google it) and although it would take a lot of force to fail, that could pull the Shackle inside of it. The Poachers knot should only be tied on a rigid host like a carabiner. But if ya use an Alpine Butterfly or a Figure 8 end loop, then absolutely, it's viable.
@@jrbtc thanks for the feedback I did mean to say poachers knot.
THX John😄
Appreciate the comment Bjorn. It's a labor of love. Glad to know I have friends who appreciate it. Cheers.
Thank you John 🙏🏿😊👍🏿. Take care of business
Danke Schon!
Beifall !!