Date: 56th of Summer
Time: Mid-Morning
Continued From
HereTrevor and Randal made their way towards the front end of the stack of trees. The carpenter and latter of the two made sure to grab the thicker of the two ropes he'd brought out into the jungle -- and the one that wasn't
already tied and fastened onto the small logs that the pair meant to haul.
"Alright, I've got one more I can show you -- at least before we start lashing this wood together into a frame later," Randal said, as the two rounded the tree stack.
The woodsman bent back down to one knee at the front of the timber and unspoiled his thick rope as he did so.
"This one is a bit harder to learn than the double fisherman, but it's just as worth it -- it'll help you drag just about anything that's round enough for you to tie a rope around and it's a sturdy knot," Randal explained.
"I'll watch," Trevor said and mirrored Randal by dropping down to one knee opposite from the carpenter, on the other side of the lumber that they were currently working with.
"This one starts differently than the other. It's called a timber hitch and leaves most of the rope left for you to hold onto and to pull your load with," Randal said. "This rope is a lot longer than the other one I brought anyway, though."
Randal started the act of tying the knot that he'd just described by making a single loop with the end of his rope and sliding it over the front of the logs.
"You wrap it through itself three times," Randal explained and did just as he was saying.
"Then you come up and through the loops that doing that makes with the rest of the rope," Randal said and continued to tie his knot. "Then all you have to do is wrap a bit of the rest of the rope around the logs about three times and you can pull on them as much as you'd like -- and thanks to the knot they'll come after you in a straight path."
For the second time, Trevor followed along with what Randal demonstrated.
"Do you want me to try this one too?" Trevor inquired after the man had finished his explanation and demonstration.
"You can," Randal replied.
"Here," the carpenter said as he went through the process of backtracking and untying his knot.
Once he had undone his own work, Randal offered his once again untied rope to Trevor. The young man took it and took a moment to shift the thick string in his grip, getting a feel for the weight of the heavy-duty chord.
Trevor didn't say anything as he started the timber hitch knot, unlike he had with the first. The timber hitch was perhaps a bit more complicated than the double fisherman's had been -- just as Randal had warned it to be -- and Trevor had to resort to picturing in his mind just what Randal had done before starting to try and tie the knot on his own.
To Trevor, it was somewhat odd the dichotomy and balance that existed between the physical, mental, and arcane realms and the skills which existed within each of these individual spheres. There was truly beauty, joy, and satisfaction to be found within the mundane, preternatural, and psychological worlds -- and not just in any one of these things. Trevor had always been more of an intellectual, but he could not help but feel that perhaps there were those things within the physical that a person needed just as much as they needed thoughts and ideas.
The young man enjoyed himself as he completed and mimicked the timber hitch knot that Randal had demonstrated to him before.
Randal grunted a bit of a mumble in approval.
"That looks strong enough, Trevor," the carpenter said. "What say we start getting back to your parcel? We've spent a good enough bit of the morning here already."
Both Trevor and Randal rose to stand.
"You know a lot about these woods. I would have thought they'd be pleasant for you," Trevor commented.
"They're a lot of things -- dangerous, expansive, mysterious, but yes, they're pleasant too in their way," Randal mused. "Still, there's work to be done -- and you need somewhere to lay your head, eh?"
Seasonal Wordcount: 24,002 + 733 = 24,735