Learning to Trad Climb: Part 5 - How to abseil/rappel

Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль

Follow DMM Graphic Designer Clare on her journey as she learns the Tools of the Trad with AMI instructor Alice Kerr.
In Part 5 of this series, Alice shows Clare how to abseil/rappel from the top of a crag.
Untying ropes safely: 0:00
Threading an in-situ maillon: 1:20
Knots in the ends of the rope: 2:47
Throwing ropes off the edge: 3:25
Using lanyards: 4:38
Tying a prusik loop: 5:49
Safely unclipping a lanyard: 6:22
Correct stance: 8:32
Clare rappels/abseils: 9:10

Пікірлер: 48

  • @wojciechkotas4452
    @wojciechkotas44524 ай бұрын

    I like the movie, thanks Alice. It might be worthy to inform that the recommended (and used) prusik knot is "French Autoblocker".

  • @IsuckYoungBlood
    @IsuckYoungBlood Жыл бұрын

    Excellent video! Clearly and nicely explained.

  • @ericvallespi8233
    @ericvallespi8233 Жыл бұрын

    What an amazing series! Very well filmed, edited and everything is explained in a super clear way!!! (and the place looks fantastic) Congrats to all the people involved in this project! Really enjoying every episode. Keep them coming ;D

  • @smurf9857
    @smurf9857 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent series!

  • @annemetteeskildsen6651
    @annemetteeskildsen6651 Жыл бұрын

    Such a great and well explained video! Thank you

  • @rara58524
    @rara58524 Жыл бұрын

    As a beginner at first I got the impression from my instructors that rappelling is like the easiest safest part of climbing. Later I learned that actually the majority of climbing accidents happen on rappel. I've had one small accident myself - when I didn't judge the slope direction properly, so I ended up rappelling to the side of the anchor, rather than straight below it. Eventually my feet lost friction and I got violently pendulumed across and smashed into the opposing corner wall. Super silly mistake in hindsight but please do always check that your route of rappelling is actually straight below your anchor and not to the side of it, forming a longer and longer pendulum.

  • @sergioroman7862
    @sergioroman7862 Жыл бұрын

    nice work Alice , thumbs up

  • @deinie2606
    @deinie2606 Жыл бұрын

    a nice trick is to clip the end of the lanyard to the rope you want to pull at the end to save having to remember

  • @matsr_2279

    @matsr_2279

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah I like that one as well

  • @peteryoung9772

    @peteryoung9772

    Жыл бұрын

    These videos are excellent! Another little trick is to install the prussik on the rope first before doing the belay device. You can then pull some rope through and it will hold the weight of it and give you some slack making it easier to load the device and less chance of a fumble/drop.

  • @tjb8841
    @tjb8841 Жыл бұрын

    Can you explain why you had the student untie first, instructor untied and threaded her ends through the anchor? As you mentioned, you don’t want to drop your rope, so I would usually want to thread the ropes through the anchor before the other person untied. Am I missing an advantage to this order?

  • @kaspareevald2264
    @kaspareevald2264 Жыл бұрын

    Love it. Good work!

  • @rafaelgomez1284
    @rafaelgomez12849 ай бұрын

    Very pedagogical lesson, whith a factual rappel. The main rason is tech safety, not only promote gear. That is fair for leanr how to proceed in the mpuntain.

  • @peterbutcher4848
    @peterbutcher4848 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent series, all the needs to know with a sprinkling of nice to know. Btw remember to reapply the sunscreen

  • @edmundravagotv171
    @edmundravagotv1714 ай бұрын

    ❤❤❤❤

  • @llovebeats3749
    @llovebeats3749 Жыл бұрын

    So how do i get down the anchor after im done rappelling down?

  • @grimlund

    @grimlund

    6 ай бұрын

    You dont. Thats why bolted belay stations is to prefer. Sometimes you must build a station using your own gear. Then you must leave gear on the mountain. Its actually more common then people might think.

  • @rorybaker3376

    @rorybaker3376

    4 ай бұрын

    Could you also make the mid section of the rope at the top simply go around tree or fixed loop and then you leave nothing behind

  • @quickdraw30
    @quickdraw30 Жыл бұрын

    nice

  • @atvairmax
    @atvairmax Жыл бұрын

    How do you do this when there is no anchor or bolts at the top? You just have to leave gear behind?

  • @acidduk

    @acidduk

    Жыл бұрын

    Tying a loop of accessory cord (aka "tat") round the biggest rock you can find seems a fairly common practice in that case, and that is left behind.

  • @huwcunningham7812

    @huwcunningham7812

    Жыл бұрын

    Often at popular crags there will be 'tat' (usually a loop or two of accessory cord approx 8mm) and a maillon left in place for all to use, it's always checked by the climbers and often replaced by your own kit. This is usually wrapped around a solid feature (think massive boulders). Climbers will often carry tat and a few maillons to avoid having to leave your own expensive gear. This is left for the next person to use or for your own retrieval at a later date. I carry around 5 meters of tat cord to make abseil stations and a few abseil rings/maillons.

  • @jr.6199

    @jr.6199

    Жыл бұрын

    What alternatives do you like, instead of having newbies hold the prusik down with one hand, since people tend to clench and pull in, during a panic, leaving a prusik less effective. Also a prusik after a load is difficult to loosen.

  • @acidduk

    @acidduk

    Жыл бұрын

    A french prusik should be easy to unlock even when loaded. If you clench the prusic and pull in, surely you are, by extension, clenching the rope, so that should keep the braking action via the ATC? If you are doing a stacked abseil as in this video, the more experienced person is going to be at the bottom already and can give the second abseiler a firemans belay if necessary too.

  • @mattbaker1683

    @mattbaker1683

    Жыл бұрын

    @@acidduk the fireman's belay is fine for short stuff but causes inconsistencies when trying to abseil, sure it's useful, but can lead to miscommunication, for example, abseiling person stops because (unknowingly) fireman has them, next they both let off and abseiling person becomes freefalling person! I actually had a fireman do a fireman's belay because my rope was a bit short by a metre or 2, and what a faff it was. I had to ask him to let go because I couldn't move, but I had to grip really hard when he let go.

  • @TSchulzeMasterClimb
    @TSchulzeMasterClimb Жыл бұрын

    Obrigado por compartilhar! Saudações de Brasil. Eu faço e recomendo: antes de procedimentos com corda (retirar corda de harness), prender a corda em algum lugar. Aqui, em vídeo, estamos tranquilos. Depois de uma atividade cansativa, onde estaremos desatentos, podemos - sem querer - deixar a corda cair. E teremos uma situação critica ou/e desesperadora.

  • @student207
    @student207 Жыл бұрын

    :50 she should have secured the rope thru first then the other climber untie and drop ends, just in case.

  • @ralphmunn1685
    @ralphmunn1685 Жыл бұрын

    That "Prusik" is actually a Penberthy; it performs the same function as a prusik, but is easier to tie with one hand, easier to untie and can be formed from thicker cord, reducing the [small] chance of burn-through. And yes, "prusik" has long been in use for friction knots in general, but it's useful to understand the differences between them.

  • @mattbaker1683

    @mattbaker1683

    Жыл бұрын

    A what?! It's a French prusik to me! Not entirely how I'd do it but that's generally because I use a sewn one (Beal jammy) or a single stranded one to eliminate the twists, both of which are easy to show but hard to explain. I'd also tie the friction hitch first to give slack for loading the rope(s) and to prove the hitch. I'm happy to stand corrected though. I have honestly never heard that name in any video or book, British or US.

  • @bloodink9508

    @bloodink9508

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mattbaker1683 in climbing we tend to think the word ‘prusik’ is the word for ‘friction thingy that keeps me from falling’ on a rappel. Nothing wrong with this, but prusik is the name of a specifically formed ‘knot’. The oc is simply informing that the particular formation shown here serves the function of a prusik but is not the actual formation a person identifying knots in rope work would call a prusik. There are a handful of methods which perform this function, and are often called prusiks. Autoblock, penberthy, microtraction and so on. Just so happens one of them is actually called prusik both in function and in fact.

  • @sergioroman7862

    @sergioroman7862

    Жыл бұрын

    i think Ralph and Blood are being a little fancy/ pickie on the choice of words here , this video series is an introduction to trad , keep it simple guys , Nice work Alice Kerr

  • @thomasmira6306
    @thomasmira63064 ай бұрын

    That one is a prusik? it seems like a machard...

  • @CuncunHadiantoLbbf
    @CuncunHadiantoLbbf Жыл бұрын

    Gunakan ikatan atau pengaman tali dobel supaya lebih aman, jika putus ada tali lain yg menopang

  • @wojciechkotas4452

    @wojciechkotas4452

    4 ай бұрын

    Wow! It must be great! 😄

  • @rfcdgaf
    @rfcdgaf10 ай бұрын

    Didn't the euro death knot get tied at 2:10 lol?

  • @adrian1990ts
    @adrian1990ts Жыл бұрын

    I feel it is quite Risky to untied your rope First without securing it with a knot or through an eye... Btw , the know you are using for rapel it is call Machard, not prusik!

  • @henkmenda
    @henkmenda20 күн бұрын

    FYI knot used on rope is not prussik, its klemheist, very similiar to prussik, but its not the same and you shouldnt squeeze them with yourhand

  • @SaoirseStuff

    @SaoirseStuff

    16 күн бұрын

    It's a french prusik, not a klemheist. They're friction hitches not knots. You are supposed to squeeze it, as shown. All these friction hitches are colloquially called prusiks

  • @mtndncer
    @mtndncer4 ай бұрын

    Both of you are anchored into the rope, no hitches, just in one rope, not a safe anchor!! I'd recommend a hitch in the rope & backing up your anchor with another sling, cordelette or webbing. :)

  • @tomvana4270
    @tomvana427011 ай бұрын

    Nose hardware is gross.

  • @silviorussino3271
    @silviorussino3271 Жыл бұрын

    It's machard knot, not a prusik! Bye 😉

  • @ShailenSobhee
    @ShailenSobhee Жыл бұрын

    Need a PhD to understand all these steps well xD

  • @adamwojtyczka5748
    @adamwojtyczka5748 Жыл бұрын

    overhand knot on the end of dropped ropes is BIG MISTAKE...never do that please

  • @causeitsthere
    @causeitsthere Жыл бұрын

    First take the rope and clove hitch or figure 8 to a biner so you don’t drop the rope. Then untie. A double figure 8 is the only rappel is the only rappel knot I used in 20 years. Take one rope and make a single figure 8, then take the other and feed it through the first figure 8 and complete the knot. This chick just showed you the famous eurodeath knot. Just yell rope twice. When you start saying to many words no one can understand you. Rappel, then yell up to your partner Off rappel. Most people prusik to their leg loop to avoid a junk show on your belay loop as the prusik is back up.

  • @jeffreyschmidt3997

    @jeffreyschmidt3997

    Жыл бұрын

    You make some good points here but edk can be tied safely and is easier to untie after loading. Look up reasons to avoid tying autoblock (not prussik) to your leg loop, as this is dangerous practice

  • @causeitsthere

    @causeitsthere

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jeffreyschmidt3997 I never autoblock.

  • @jeffreyschmidt3997

    @jeffreyschmidt3997

    Жыл бұрын

    @@causeitsthere I'm not referring to what you do, I'm referring to what you said most people do. Prussik is not releasable under load, and so autoblock or another releasable friction hitch should be used. My points were related to not using leg loop and safety of edk when tied properly

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