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UPDATE: I see now after some feedback that I could have clarified what we are doing here a little better. Essentially, what we are doing first at 0:52 is placing the working hand under the standing end of the rope and pulling a bight of it up over the area of where we are tying the knot. This can seem strange at first, because the Somerville involves making a loop, not a bight. But keep in mind that a loop is just a bight where both ends are touching each other. If you pinch that bight down in place, you'll have a (messy) loop. The direction of that loop is also critical (though an incorrectly-tied knot is actually still much stronger than a square/granny knot), so it's important to follow the motion exactly. IT'S IMPORTANT to keep that working hand underneath the bight as you bring the bight of rope up over the knot. If you pull it out, the bight will simply fall out of existence, nothing is supporting it. Watch closely. Then, at 0:59 we then grab the tail end and let the bight fall down over the tail. At this point, the tail is keeping the bight in place. As the bight falls over the tail, it becomes held in the only formation it can make, which is a loop (specifically, the same-direction loop you would make when doing it in the method outlined in video 1.) The next-to-last step of the knot, shown at 1:11, is the same as the "first method" video. We take the tail and run it around the cuff, back up through the loop we just made. This secures everything, all we have to do is then pull everything tight, which is the last step. Most of the pulling-tight (aka "dressing" the knot) is done by pulling on the standing (long) end, but do make sure to give the shorter tail end some tugging afterwards, too. Pulling on the tail FIRST, however, can cause the knot to deform. It takes a bit of practice, but feels straightforward when the muscle memory kicks in. --------------------------------------------------------------------- Method One Video (I HIGHLY recommend watching this first, if you are unfamiliar with how to do it): • Somerville Bowline Method 1 (Standard Method) --------------------------------------------------------------------- ORIGINAL DESCRIPTION: This way of tying the Somerville is very similar to the "standard" way of teaching the Somerville, but it combines some of the steps to gain a little speed.