Ropework & camp joinery
Lashings & Knots
A core set of knots, hitches, and lashings that turn cordage and green wood into shelters, racks, tripods, and repairs — the difference between a pile of sticks and a working camp.
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General practice
- Learn a small kit well: bowline, taut-line, clove hitch, trucker's hitch, square lashing, tripod lashing, timber hitch, prusik.
- Match cordage to load: bank line #36 for camp joinery, 550 paracord for utility, 6–8 mm static for shelter ridgelines and bear hangs.
- Dress and set every knot before loading — twists and crossed turns cut strength by 20–40%.
- Frap turns (perpendicular wraps between poles) are what make a lashing rigid; skip them and the joint racks.
- Finish lashings with two half hitches or a clove hitch on a standing part, not a granny knot.
- Protect cordage from grit and UV — coil off the ground, hang to dry, and retire any line with a glazed or fused spot.
Regional focus
Midwest US
Prairie wind demands anchored guy-outs and redundant hitches.
Key items
- Taut-line hitch on every guy
- Deadman anchors with a timber hitch on a buried log
- Tripod lashing for pot hangers over open fires

