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Rope II

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Knowing knots is a great way to get a solid foundation. I recommend using your favorite way to learn. Whether it is watching someone on YouTube, or getting someone to talk you through some steps. You will want short piece of rope. About 6 feet. 72 inches, or 1.5 meters will be good. Practice till you can tie each knot with your eyes closed, with gloves on. Some basic knots. I like to teach in families of knots so that the learning builds on itself. Over hand. Double overhand or barrel knot Fishermen's or double barrel knot Figure eight Figure eight follow through Bowline Double Bowline {Images from google} These families all have different uses. Learning them all well, will build skills you will use in all phases of a team building day. Just a short list of uses would be climbing, joining ends together and some are crucial to finishing some group building initiatives. You can find rope all around you even if you are new

Rope

If you work in the team building, challenge course, or group facilitation industries you have, had, or will have a pile of rope. Whether you are building, beginning, in full swing, or part-time. There is rope everywhere and somewhere. We belay with it. Accessing heights and challenging fears. Warm up with Nascar circles or Everyone up We play with it. Learning with activities like the simple Tug-o-war, to Turn style, Spaghetti soup and many more.  It makes boundaries and pathways in any shape or form. Pass the knot helps us talk and debrief.  Rope can be the whole element. It can also be just a part of it. Sometimes it can even be used to make a whole new prop. Rope will be a strong assistant for you for as long as you have people to teach. Over the next few weeks I'll give out some activities and uses for rope that will help grow your programs and progressions. Let's call it Rope Month. ALWAYS FOLLOW MANUFACTURE RECOMMENDATIONS AND GUIDELINES FOR U

Never too Late

I often struggle with getting rid of things. Old clothes. Books, music, and movies. Parts and pieces. Tools. Shoes. Used up gear. Part of this is not wanting to contribute to the ever-growing and already bloated waste stream. Part of it is just a difficulty letting go. "What if I can use this?" The stuff that is headed to the trash, for what ever reason,  gives me a surge of ideas. Some good. Others just a long shot at not being wasteful. There are things that can be reused. Made into something. Different then what they were used as before their course was set and run out but still good and helpful. There are also ideas that can be revisited. Renewed. Reimagened. Even rediscovered. This is an effort to repurpose, recreate, reimagine, and rediscover. I want to help put "re" in the forefront of things, thoughts and processes in the challenge course and outdoor facilitation worlds. ALWAYS FOLLOW MANUFACTURE RECOMMENDATIONS AND GUIDELINES.