Square lashings are used to bind together two spars that are at right angles
with one another.
i) Place the poles on the ground in the shape of a cross. Tie a clove hitch
around the bottom pole near the crosspiece. Twist the free end of the rope
around its standing part and tuck it out of the way.
ii) Make three or four wraps
around the spars, keeping the rope very tight. As you form the wraps, lay the
rope on the outside of each previous turn around the crosspiece, and on the
inside of each previous turn around the bottom pole.
iii) Then wind three or four
frapping turns around the wrapping to tighten the lashing as much as you can.
iv) Finish it off with another clove hitch.
Diagonal Lashing
Diagonal lashings are used to lash to spars together other than at a right
angle.
i) Start by tying a timber hitch around both poles and pulling it snug.
ii) Make
four tight wraps around the spars, laying each wrap neatly alongside the timber
hitch.
iii) Make four more tight wraps across the first three.
iv) Frap it three or four
times and finish it off with a clove hitch.
Sheer (or Shear) Lashing
Sheer lashing is used two lash two spars together.
i) Lay two spars side by
side.
ii) Tie a clove hitch to one spar.
iii) Make four loose wraps around the spars and
four frapping turns between them.
iv) Finish with a clove hitch.
Tripod Lashing
A Tripod lashing is made by laying three spars alongside each other, with the
center spare pointing in the opposite direction to that of the outside spars.
i) Tie a clove hitch around one outside pole.
ii) Loosely wrap the spars five or six
times, then make the frapping on either side of the center spar.
iii) Finish the
lashing with a clove hitch around the outside spar.
When you place an order
with Amazon.Com using
the search box below, a small referral fee is returned to The Inquiry Net to
help defer the expense of keeping us online. Thank you for your
consideration!
Dead Bugs, Blow Guns, Sharp Knives, & Snakes:
What More
Could A Boy Want?
Old School Scouting:
What to Do, and How to Do It!
To Email me, replace "(at)" below with
"@"
Rick(at)Kudu.Net
If you have questions about one of my 2,000 pages here, you must send me the
"URL" of the page! This "URL" is sometimes called the
"Address" and it is usually found in a little box near the top of your
screen. Most
URLs start with the letters "http://"
The Kudu Net is a backup "mirror" of The Inquiry
Net.
The purpose of this Website is to provide access
to hard to find, out-of-print documents. Much of the
content has been edited to be of practical use in today's world and is not
intended as historical preservation. I will be happy to provide
scans of specific short passages in the original documents for people involved in
academic research.