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![]() Recently I decided to take my D40 along to document the state of the practice
of random cleat hitching in a small, small-craft marina in Wildwood South Jersey. (This is the southern part of "New" Jersey, where those stereotypical denigrations of the state have absolutely no traction -- farmlands (the Garden State), pine barrens, coast lines (albeit choked in places w/grandiose marketing dreams). My commute takes me through Clifford Ashley's old waypoint of Bridgeton & Port Norris/Bivalve (a bit of a deliberate devation -- much crabbing, few oysters).) I posted 16 photos on the Int.Guild of Knot Tyers [sic] Practical Knots forum, at http://igkt.net/sm/index.php?topic=1440.0 Some of these are wonders to behold ! ![]() ![]() Besides raising the obvious question Why don't folks know (... better)?, the frequent sharing of a cleat (new-fangled, S-shaped ones, here) raises the question of etiquette in doing that. Is it expected? (Well, I think that the circumstances frequently give no good option.) And in the case where the underlying line must be removed, is the remover expected to re-tie the overlying hitch as it was done (might be hard to remember/figure), or ... ?! Of the entire set of hitches I saw that brief visit (35?), maybe just a couple could be matched to book-wise instructions; many are more nearly works of art -- or comedy. (Actually, had I thought them art, I'd have used more megapixels in photographing them -- but in fact stayed at 1.5mp.) Then there is this S-shaped cleat: it gives different aspects to different approaches -- i.e., from its left vs. right (seems better from its right, viewed from the dock, boatwards). Also, am I right in suspecting that one loses friction as the line-/cleat-size ratio diminishes (relatively small line for cleat)? -- take extra fig.8 wraps, or maybe put in a full round turn to start?! --dl* ==== Last edited by Dan Lehman : 08-08-2009 at 02:27 PM. |
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