I'm watching this at midnight, saving it and definitely watching it in the morning! My dad's motto was always, "if you can't tie a knot, tie a lot", haha!
I knew the knot but didn't know it by anker hitch I learned it from my grandfather with no name just a hitch lol, I used it in lashing a post stake to an 8 inch water hose on a construction site while my newfy coworker watched. He grew up on boats in newfoundland canada and was unaware of the knot.. he was amazed and asked where I'd learned it so I explained. Never thought I'd teach a seafaring newfy to tie a knot he didn't know before lol. Cheers 😅
Nice video, well done and simply explained. However, just for funzies, here's a more sailorish version. First a bit of rope terminology. The cut end of the rope is the bitter end, the end part that we are working is called the working end, oddly enough. The rest of the line is the standing part. The first part where you are looping through the ring is called a round turn, then we take a half hitch through the round turn and finish off with a half hitch around the standing part. Thus a sailor would describe it this way. Take a round turn through the eye (ring), half hitch through the round turn and finish with a half hitch around the standing part. So now you know how to describe it to a sailor, although a sailor would already know all this, he would simply think of it as displaying your knowledge of marline-spike seamanship.😁😁😁
Thanks 🙏🏻. Was a Boy Scout over 50 years ago and have since forgotten most of the dozen or so knots 🪢 I had learned. Thanks for a great explanation of a very useful knot 🪢 that many will find to be helpful.
Hey Dan, I just have to say that I bought your Bushcraft for Kids book for my almost 8 year old nephew this past summer. He loves it still. Tonight, I was browsing through it myself. You did an excellent job with that book. It's so informative, understandable and the colored pictures are wonderful.
There are other knots that are used for the same purpose. They also have two wraps around the metal ring, and the knot is tight up against the ring to reduce movement and resist chafing. I was a chief engineer at sea for twenty years and now live completely off grid. Remember, if you can’t tie a knot, tie a lot of them!
I love this knot because it's so simple to teach people AND the more load you apply to the knot, the more secure it is because it just bites down harder on itself! But it still can be untie fairly easily... Another really good anchor knot is the bunt line hitch... Although... It is a tougher knot to untie after a heavy load
I find a lot of stuff by accident but I found your channel through newswatch 16 WNEP Pennsylvania outdoor life thing they did on you a few years ago. I live nearby up in northeast PA, maybe one of these days I'll make it down there for a class or a course I do some of this on my own but definitely don't know hardly anything compared to those of you that actually do it routinely and know these things from doing them...
This is exactly why I tell folks they need to get a copy of the Ashley Book of Knots. If you're camping or building a homestead or just tinkering in general... you need a copy of the ABOK. It's hard to express just how powerfully useful that book is, and you'll love having it to read by the fire!
Nice to see these old knots come back again. I was shown this in the boy scouts when I was 11 or 12 - I’m 76 now. We called it a round turn and two half-hitches.
This a great know to know for sure! Hope your week is absolutely blessed Mr.Dan! Watching from the Cowichan Valley on Vancouver Island in Canada! Cheers, Jerbs 👍🏼🇺🇸🔥🔪🔥🇨🇦👍🏼
Well done. One of the most important features of that knot is that it retains 100% of its strength...meaning the line is not cutting itself under load. Cheers!
I saw the picture of the knot and knew it was an anchor hitch - That is an unusual knot to see on UA-cam. It is a good knot - good presentation.Good on ya, from one knot head to another. ;-)
On the first thing you said, I found your channel many years ago, I was looking up how to tan a hide, I think it was before you were on Alone, but I’ve been following you ever since. Thanks for many years of stuff to pass onto my children, and making camp more enjoyable.
I found this knot on the Knots 3D app about a year ago and have been using it to tie cordage to carabiners (for ridge lines, bear bag hangs, etc). Good stuff.
I used to teach knots and pioneering at a boy scout camp years ago and always love a good knot video! You have a great way of teaching and showing the knot, thanks for making this video! I never knew this knot, but it's basically two half hitches with an extra loop to keep the rope from slipping. I'm definitely going to use this next time I go camping.
Great job and explanation I like knowing how to tie many different knots and when to use them. I chuckled when you said you tie an anchor to a line then I laughed out loud when you said you tie hard objects to a line. Everybody understands what you said no problem, keep up the good work. It's people like you and your content that make youtube great!
I soooo love learning easy knots to remember, that are elegant in form, and effective in funtion. Thank You! Been sitting here playing with it now for a couple minutes after you showed how, and its already an old friend that I'll probably use a lot!!! Brillant!
Actually found you because Sean Kelly from corporals corner, said to check out your channel in one of his videos I've been watching his channel for like 10+ years now. Pretty sure he mentioned your channel more than once? Anyways I seen a ton of your shows now and I'm here to stay.
My favourite is the buntline hitch, when easy untying is not necessary. It's like a mirrored two half hitches, but way stronger (up to too strong...) and you are also able to tie a slipped version. Anchor hitch is perfect for temporary tying and seems more secure than two half hitches.
Thanks for this. I think I found your channel years ago by looking for actual uses for knots. It's easy to find videos showing how to tie knots, but it's much harder to find videos for how and when to use a particular knot.
Thank you for this video. I have a copy of the "Clifford W. Ashley Book Of Knots." Sometimes referred to as the CWABOK, it contains thousands of knots both useful and decorative. I highly recommend it to anyone interested in knots. The Anchor Hitch is indeed a splendid knot. Again, thank you for this video.
I always tell people to get the ABoK. Greatest book to have in the library, imo. Practicing Marlinspike Seamanship is a great way to decorate your equipment, too. Mikko Snellman has a fantastic channel here on YT that you should check out. His vids on making pine tar and birch tar are exceptional.
@@threeriversforge1997 The books by Hervey Garret Smith are great for full project skills with canvas, sail twine, cord and rope. His books include full plans and techniques for things like canvas buckets and sea bags. The Arts Of The Sailor and The Marlinspike Sailor are a couple. You could take the techniques and use them to make haversacks and things like that.
Definitely gonna keep this one in my back pocket. I usually just throw a bowline knot on most things but this anchor hitch will definitely come in handy in the right circumstances. If you want to check out another really sweet knot, look up the "taughtline hitch"
The bowline works for most things, but if you don't want your rope to run or move, the fixed loop on the bowline doesn't help. Usually, I use either the round turn two half or the anchor bend.
You can hitch to the object using whichever hitch is best suited, and the finish with two half hitches like what is shown. Works with a large variety of hitches on the ring, depending on how permanent it needs to be, whether the ring should slip or not, or how quickly it should be to untie.
We call it a Beckett Hitch, because it performs the same task as a Beckett. (A Beckett is a wedge socket used to hold the dead end of a wire rope on a crane or winch.
Just as an aside, if you look at any older type anchor that has been cast, the inside of the ring is shaped like an "M" that is smoothed down. This is to help the rope stay in place while a sailor is tying the anchor knot. More modern anchors are meant to use chains so don't have/need this feature but the older style anchors still do.
Excellent video. I've always used a round turn with two half hitches. The advantage is it can be removed while under load. Kinda like the difference between a clovehitch and a constrictor knot.
@@wholegrain27 Sorry to take so long to get back to you. This just showed up in my feed today. Anyhow, there is little difference between the two. The anchor bend takes an additional pass through the anchor ring before being tied off. The anchor bend is a full turn and two half hitches as opposed to a turn and two half hitches. Since the strain is on the line and not the bitter end, it can be released under load. Once it's tied, it won't loosen with strain and lull.
Also a great knot for temporarily tying a toggle onto the end of your rope. If one end already has a loop tied in it like a bowline, then the toggle on the other allows for attaching multiple ropes together. thanks for the video.
I'm watching this at midnight, saving it and definitely watching it in the morning! My dad's motto was always, "if you can't tie a knot, tie a lot", haha!
I knew not that I needed this new knot.
Knot only is that knot just a good knot, its a great knot!! 😁 Knot too shabby!!
I knew the knot but didn't know it by anker hitch I learned it from my grandfather with no name just a hitch lol, I used it in lashing a post stake to an 8 inch water hose on a construction site while my newfy coworker watched. He grew up on boats in newfoundland canada and was unaware of the knot.. he was amazed and asked where I'd learned it so I explained. Never thought I'd teach a seafaring newfy to tie a knot he didn't know before lol. Cheers 😅
Nice video, well done and simply explained. However, just for funzies, here's a more sailorish version. First a bit of rope terminology. The cut end of the rope is the bitter end, the end part that we are working is called the working end, oddly enough. The rest of the line is the standing part. The first part where you are looping through the ring is called a round turn, then we take a half hitch through the round turn and finish off with a half hitch around the standing part. Thus a sailor would describe it this way. Take a round turn through the eye (ring), half hitch through the round turn and finish with a half hitch around the standing part. So now you know how to describe it to a sailor, although a sailor would already know all this, he would simply think of it as displaying your knowledge of marline-spike seamanship.😁😁😁
Found you while watching Dave Canterbury. You were recommended.
Thanks 🙏🏻. Was a Boy Scout over 50 years ago and have since forgotten most of the dozen or so knots 🪢 I had learned. Thanks for a great explanation of a very useful knot 🪢 that many will find to be helpful.
Thank you.
I don't have my 17ft.trailer-sailor anymore. But this knot is a winner.
This is a perfect complement to the bowline! Gonna give it a try on my adventures!
Anchor Hitch is a solid one.
Hey Dan, I just have to say that I bought your Bushcraft for Kids book for my almost 8 year old nephew this past summer. He loves it still. Tonight, I was browsing through it myself. You did an excellent job with that book. It's so informative, understandable and the colored pictures are wonderful.
A round turn and 2 half hitches while similar is easier to tie and untie under load.
Just looked up the book and going to order it for my kids! Looks really interesting and perfect for them.
Oh had I discovered this knot as a young man...!
GI Gin, GI Gravy.... Jee, I wished I'd join the Navy....⚓
Great viedo, Thanks....
I think your greatest asset is your teaching ability.
There are other knots that are used for the same purpose. They also have two wraps around the metal ring, and the knot is tight up against the ring to reduce movement and resist chafing. I was a chief engineer at sea for twenty years and now live completely off grid.
Remember, if you can’t tie a knot, tie a lot of them!
What are some alternatives you recommend?
Some UA-camrs talk way too much. You explain just enough!
I found you through Townsend. This channel needs more nutmeg😅
Nice knot.
I need to learn this one and the Siberian hitch.
I love this knot because it's so simple to teach people AND the more load you apply to the knot, the more secure it is because it just bites down harder on itself! But it still can be untie fairly easily...
Another really good anchor knot is the bunt line hitch... Although... It is a tougher knot to untie after a heavy load
I use this knot on my adventures all the time!❤❤❤❤❤
Thanks
That's a nice knot
Very well taught
The anchor hitch is the first proper knot I learned to do followed by the bowline !
I'm a knot nerd myself. I too will sit and practice knots. This one's a good simple effective knot, thanks for this.
Yay thank you. This is going in my “Knots” playlist.
I learned of your channel from Townsends, and stayed for the excellent content.
If you go UNDER at the end, instead of over, you end up with a fisherman’s bend. A very strong securing!
I find a lot of stuff by accident but I found your channel through newswatch 16 WNEP Pennsylvania outdoor life thing they did on you a few years ago. I live nearby up in northeast PA, maybe one of these days I'll make it down there for a class or a course I do some of this on my own but definitely don't know hardly anything compared to those of you that actually do it routinely and know these things from doing them...
Love your content brother! Very best wishes from the UK 🇬🇧
This is exactly why I tell folks they need to get a copy of the Ashley Book of Knots. If you're camping or building a homestead or just tinkering in general... you need a copy of the ABOK. It's hard to express just how powerfully useful that book is, and you'll love having it to read by the fire!
Try the maritime book of knots and fancy rope work!
@@bobvisser8689 I'll look it up. Thanks.
It's too expensive. I would love to have a copy, but it's outrageous.
Yeah., I found this by accident! Glad I did.
So many uses for this knot. Thanks for sharing, keep on doing that thing you do.
I love this guy.
Nice to see these old knots come back again. I was shown this in the boy scouts when I was 11 or 12 - I’m 76 now. We called it a round turn and two half-hitches.
This a great know to know for sure! Hope your week is absolutely blessed Mr.Dan! Watching from the Cowichan Valley on Vancouver Island in Canada! Cheers, Jerbs 👍🏼🇺🇸🔥🔪🔥🇨🇦👍🏼
Well done. One of the most important features of that knot is that it retains 100% of its strength...meaning the line is not cutting itself under load. Cheers!
New knots have always been a struggle for me to learn. Thanks for the new tool!
one of my favorite knots 😼
I saw the picture of the knot and knew it was an anchor hitch - That is an unusual knot to see on UA-cam. It is a good knot - good presentation.Good on ya, from one knot head to another. ;-)
On the first thing you said, I found your channel many years ago, I was looking up how to tan a hide, I think it was before you were on Alone, but I’ve been following you ever since.
Thanks for many years of stuff to pass onto my children, and making camp more enjoyable.
Found you by accident. Love your knot.
Found you years back & still LEARNEN & ENJOYEN ! TAKE CARE..
Good stuff Dan - will visit more.
I think I found you because I had been watching videos about blacksmithing.
Yes that is a very secure positive knot to a fixture.
Great tip Dan 👍
Good afternoon from Syracuse NY USA brother and everyone else thank you for sharing your skills
I found this knot on the Knots 3D app about a year ago and have been using it to tie cordage to carabiners (for ridge lines, bear bag hangs, etc). Good stuff.
Daniel, Daniel
Thanks for the song
Thanks for the knot
Good on ya, Tim
Good. Thanks. Great knot to add to the toolbox.
Simple, clear explanation of how to tie this knot.
I used to teach knots and pioneering at a boy scout camp years ago and always love a good knot video! You have a great way of teaching and showing the knot, thanks for making this video! I never knew this knot, but it's basically two half hitches with an extra loop to keep the rope from slipping. I'm definitely going to use this next time I go camping.
Great knob very much needed, Thanks
Great job and explanation I like knowing how to tie many different knots and when to use them. I chuckled when you said you tie an anchor to a line then I laughed out loud when you said you tie hard objects to a line. Everybody understands what you said no problem, keep up the good work. It's people like you and your content that make youtube great!
Your knot tutorials are some of the best out there.
I soooo love learning easy knots to remember, that are elegant in form, and effective in funtion. Thank You! Been sitting here playing with it now for a couple minutes after you showed how, and its already an old friend that I'll probably use a lot!!! Brillant!
Actually found you because Sean Kelly from corporals corner, said to check out your channel in one of his videos I've been watching his channel for like 10+ years now. Pretty sure he mentioned your channel more than once? Anyways I seen a ton of your shows now and I'm here to stay.
I use an anchor hitch for the tie off ring on 3/4" Milwaukee impact drivers at work, when we are at height.
We use duck tape to hold the battery...
That's a great knot, thank you!
will come in handy for some projects where ill need to pull things. thanks
Thank you for sharing.
Turbo-sized Two Half Hitches?! Love it, thanks!!
My favourite is the buntline hitch, when easy untying is not necessary. It's like a mirrored two half hitches, but way stronger (up to too strong...) and you are also able to tie a slipped version. Anchor hitch is perfect for temporary tying and seems more secure than two half hitches.
Clear and concise. Thanks
Thanks for this. I think I found your channel years ago by looking for actual uses for knots. It's easy to find videos showing how to tie knots, but it's much harder to find videos for how and when to use a particular knot.
Love how you self edit in real time.
Thank you. I had not seen this knot before. Will definitely give it a try
Thx Dan!
Hey! Row, Row, Row Your Boat, is one of the wisest songs out there. Don't knock it, 'kay?
Love the channel, though.
Thanks for the video! Your knot-tying steps were very clear and easy to follow. :)
thank you for sharing Dan.
Thanks, I'll be getting a copy of your Bushcraft for kids - thanks to Jon Faber
Thankyou 😊. I now love it too!
Thank you for this video.
I have a copy of the "Clifford W. Ashley Book Of Knots." Sometimes referred to as the CWABOK, it contains thousands of knots both useful and decorative. I highly recommend it to anyone interested in knots.
The Anchor Hitch is indeed a splendid knot.
Again, thank you for this video.
ABoK 1723 Anchor Hitch or Fisherman's Bend
I always tell people to get the ABoK. Greatest book to have in the library, imo. Practicing Marlinspike Seamanship is a great way to decorate your equipment, too. Mikko Snellman has a fantastic channel here on YT that you should check out. His vids on making pine tar and birch tar are exceptional.
@@threeriversforge1997 The books by Hervey Garret Smith are great for full project skills with canvas, sail twine, cord and rope.
His books include full plans and techniques for things like canvas buckets and sea bags.
The Arts Of The Sailor and The Marlinspike Sailor are a couple. You could take the techniques and use them to make haversacks and things like that.
Definitely gonna keep this one in my back pocket. I usually just throw a bowline knot on most things but this anchor hitch will definitely come in handy in the right circumstances.
If you want to check out another really sweet knot, look up the "taughtline hitch"
The bowline works for most things, but if you don't want your rope to run or move, the fixed loop on the bowline doesn't help. Usually, I use either the round turn two half or the anchor bend.
You can hitch to the object using whichever hitch is best suited, and the finish with two half hitches like what is shown. Works with a large variety of hitches on the ring, depending on how permanent it needs to be, whether the ring should slip or not, or how quickly it should be to untie.
For a ring also try the bull hitch also very simple and very secure 😊
We call it a Beckett Hitch, because it performs the same task as a Beckett. (A Beckett is a wedge socket used to hold the dead end of a wire rope on a crane or winch.
It's always fun to listen to your jokes Dan
Just as an aside, if you look at any older type anchor that has been cast, the inside of the ring is shaped like an "M" that is smoothed down. This is to help the rope stay in place while a sailor is tying the anchor knot. More modern anchors are meant to use chains so don't have/need this feature but the older style anchors still do.
Good knot to know for us 4WD enthusiasts and also for cutting trees.
How did i never ever see this hitch before..thanks
Thanks again!
Great video and information.
Thanks! I think I will try this in place of a buntline hitch.
I have a 3m pieces of rope beside my chair for practicing knots I learn on YT like this one. Thanks again.
I found you from your collab with Townsends.
Now I can finally secure my tent with an anchor. Take that, blustery gale! 😄
Thank you -- good info. Now, I can do it.
Dan ..u r the man n just hit another 1 out of the park !!! Thnx much n be well.
Thank you for teaching me a new knot. I have been using the bowline for years as my go-to knot.
YES! Oh man, so often I've wondered "what is THE knot" to ties things to things. Legendary knot. Thank you
Concise, and informative, knotty and nautical, outdoor envy peaked and promoted...camp on!
Short, sweet, and to the point. Keep it up and stay in the woods!
Great knot! Stay in the woods!
Great knot
Loos like the ''round turn and two half hitches: I was taught as a scout.
Excellent video. I've always used a round turn with two half hitches. The advantage is it can be removed while under load. Kinda like the difference between a clovehitch and a constrictor knot.
Would this anchor hitch be more secure under varying conditions (load - unload on the line) then the 2 half hitches?
@@wholegrain27 Sorry to take so long to get back to you. This just showed up in my feed today.
Anyhow, there is little difference between the two. The anchor bend takes an additional pass through the anchor ring before being tied off. The anchor bend is a full turn and two half hitches as opposed to a turn and two half hitches. Since the strain is on the line and not the bitter end, it can be released under load. Once it's tied, it won't loosen with strain and lull.
I found you when you did the videos with Townsends. That cordage video was really good.
Good stuff!
Backhand knot is a good knot also
Beautiful And elegant knot.....thank you for sharing. Love it.. i have been wanting a knot just like that one.
Also a great knot for temporarily tying a toggle onto the end of your rope. If one end already has a loop tied in it like a bowline, then the toggle on the other allows for attaching multiple ropes together. thanks for the video.