Brock Mayo
TreeHouser
Anyone ever tie into their blakes hitch with a clove hitch on a carabiner? Just to clarify, I’m talking about a traditional non-split tail setup. You tie your blakes, put a clove hitch about where you want it (below the blakes), clip a carabiner to it, make a slight length adjustment if needed and climb. If you need to adjust the length during use, just unweight it, slide some rope through, pull it tight and continue.
I use this as my second tie in for double crotching (eye to eye as my normal setup). I would never use a clove as an endline attachment, but with the tail secured in the blakes it seems bomb proof.
I use the clove hitch on a carabiner almost exclusively for attachment to anchors for rock climbing. Never had a problem and I’ve never heard of many problems (as long as the loaded rope is on the spine side of the carabiner).
However in the tree world, a great number of people I talk to believe that the use of the clove hitch on a carabiner will ultimately end in their death!
Anyone use the blakes/clove hitch combo? By my calculations
, it’s the fastest most adjustable way to tie up the traditional (non-split tail) blakes hitch.
I use this as my second tie in for double crotching (eye to eye as my normal setup). I would never use a clove as an endline attachment, but with the tail secured in the blakes it seems bomb proof.
I use the clove hitch on a carabiner almost exclusively for attachment to anchors for rock climbing. Never had a problem and I’ve never heard of many problems (as long as the loaded rope is on the spine side of the carabiner).
However in the tree world, a great number of people I talk to believe that the use of the clove hitch on a carabiner will ultimately end in their death!

Anyone use the blakes/clove hitch combo? By my calculations
