🎁 Get your FREE Knot Starter Pack — 10 Essential Knots Every Dad Should Know
The single most useful knot you will ever learn. Once you get this one, you will feel it click — and you will use it for the rest of your life. I promise.
Two contrasting colored ropes so every step is crystal clear — even if you have never tied a knot in your life.
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All you really need is a piece of rope. Here are the best options depending on what you are using it for.
A 6–8 foot piece of 3/8" nylon rope is perfect for learning. Soft and easy to work with your hands.
View on Amazon ↗Paracord 550 is the go-to for camping use. Strong, lightweight, and you can pick it up anywhere.
View on Amazon ↗For securing loads on a roof rack, use a thicker braided rope with good grip and stretch resistance.
View on Amazon ↗Note: Links above are Amazon affiliate links. We earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend gear we actually use.
Take it slow the first time. Read each step, look at the photo, then try it with your rope. Most people get it on the second try.
Hold the rope with about 18 inches of working end. Cross the working end over the standing part to form a small loop — this is called the "hole." Keep it loose for now.
Take the working end (the rabbit) and bring it UP through the hole from underneath. This is the move everyone pictures when they hear the classic rhyme.
Take the working end and loop it around the standing part — going behind it and back around the front. The standing part is the "tree" in the classic memory trick.
Bring the working end back down through the same hole it came up through — going back down in the same direction it came from. The loop is now formed.
Before you tighten, adjust all the parts so they sit neatly. The loop should look clean and even. Dressing the knot means making sure nothing is twisted or overlapping wrong.
Pull the standing part firmly while holding the loop. The knot should cinch down cleanly and hold its shape. Give it a solid tug from multiple angles to confirm it is set.
"The rabbit comes up the hole, runs around the tree, and goes back down the hole." Teach this to your kids and they will never forget it.
Once you can tie it looking at your hands, practice until you can do it without looking. That is when you actually own this knot.
When you are confident, look up the one-handed bowline. It is a useful skill for situations where your other hand is occupied or holding something.
This is not just a knot to learn and forget. Here is where it actually shows up in real life.
Tie off tarps, hang food bags, and secure tent guy lines with a loop that will not slip under tension.
Create a fixed anchor point on any roof rack or truck bed for securing lumber, kayaks or furniture.
The bowline is the most trusted dock knot among sailors and weekend boaters — a loop that holds without jamming.
The most taught and most tested knot in scouting. Mastering this earns your first knot badge.
You do not need anything fancy. Here are the three rope types that cover most real-life uses.
Soft, flexible and easy to work with. Perfect for learning and practicing in your hands before using real working rope.
See on AmazonThe gold standard for camping. Strong enough to hang food bags, set up tarps and rig shelters in the backcountry.
See on AmazonFor securing real loads on a truck or roof rack. Thicker, stiffer and built to handle the kind of tension a bowline is made for.
See on AmazonYou got the bowline. Here are three knots that pair perfectly with it — each one builds on what you just learned.
Use your new bowline as the anchor point for a trucker's hitch — the most powerful load-securing combination there is.
Learn This KnotA fast and simple hitch for attaching rope to a post or tree. Great for setting up camp and quick anchor points.
Learn This KnotThe perfect knot to teach your kids right after the bowline. Simple, reliable and one of the first Scout knots ever taught.
Learn This KnotGet the free KnotItAll Starter Pack — a printable beginner guide with the 10 knots every dad should know, delivered straight to your inbox.
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