Makes neat ball on a rope's end when throwing it.
Monkey’s Fist Knot
Makes neat ball on a rope's end when throwing it.
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Uses: The Monkey’s Fist Knot (ABOK # 2200 – 3, p 354) is used both as a decorative knot and to weight the end of a heaving line (see caution below).
Warning: This demonstration shows the Long End being used to tie the knot. For a long piece of rope this would be very inconvenient. The Short End should be used to minimize the length to be pulled through when the initial knot is completed.
Tying it: The Monkey’s Fist Knot is usually tied around separated fingers. For the demonstration, a U-shaped piece of metal strip was used instead and three turns of rope were used in each direction. After each set of complete turns, change direction by passing the end through the middle. For each direction count carefully: it is very easy to miscount and have more strands on one side than the other.
Finishing it: The animation shows an overhand knot being inserted into the center. This makes a slightly fuller knot. After the overhand knot is in place the whole knot is tightened starting near the buried overhand knot and finishing with the other end of the rope.
Alternative Finish: Ashley describes a version shown here where both ends remain outside the fist and are spliced together so that the Fist becomes part of an eye splice. The other end terminates in another eye splice. This allows the weighted Monkey’s Fist Knot to be reused: it can be attached to any heaving line just by interlocking the second eye splice into the heaving line’s eye splice.
Heaving a Line: Before throwing a heaving line, Split the Coil into two parts. Throw the smaller half as a neat coil so that it carries the distance. The rope pays out partly from the coil you throw and partly from the coil in your hand.
Danger with Weights: The Monkey’s Fist Knot is commonly described as being tied around a small weight to make the heaving line easier to throw a long way. In these pictures the crew had used a small rubber ball. Heavier weights can be a danger. Dock hands have been known to cut heavily weighted Monkey’s Fists off the end of heaving lines – and I sympathize with them. (Grog’s father, E.B. Grogono, served as a ship’s doctor on a submarine depot ship in World War II. He watched professional dock hands cut off Monkey’s Fist Knots and his account remains in my mind). Imagine looking up against a bright sky to and catch a rope coil and being hit instead by a heavy missile.