Feature

David Lambert, Canada's Fastest Knot-Tyer

As a member of the Southern Ontario Knot Tyers, Dave Lambert and a small cohort of local knotting enthusiasts will be hosting the Semi-Annual Meeting of the International Guild of Knot Tyers (North American Branch) in Hamilton in the fall of 2014.

By Margaret Lindsay Holton
Published February 07, 2014

Believe it or not, a well-crafted knot could save your life.

Imagine being 'lost at sea' (or adrift in Lake Ontario) with no 'Land Ho!'
Imagine being 'lost at sea' (or adrift in Lake Ontario) with no 'Land Ho!'

The Hollywood Reporter recently announced that famed film producers Weinstein & Co were buying the film option on Paul Tough's riveting New York Times article about an east-coast fisherman lost at sea.

All told, this fisherman's tale is an ancient story with an amazing new twist. Central to his harrowing story of survival at sea is the fisherman's good sense to 'tie on' securely between two floating lobster trap buoys to stay alive.

The likelihood that he would have survived this anxious ocean ordeal without a well-crafted knot is, frankly, unbelievable.

We forget about knots. We forget that they often play a vital role in our cognitive and motor skill development.

One of our first mastered skills - separating us from 'a baby' to 'a child' - is to tie up our own shoe laces. That over-and-under-loop-twisted-wrapped-tucked-pulled-through-loop-pulled-taut manoeuvre is actually known as a 'slippery reef knot'. Our mastery of this complex skill is evident when our knot is secure: our laces do not come undone.

Traditionally, Boy and Girl Scouts learn the basics of knot tying early on.

Official Knot Chart from the Boy Scouts of America
Official Knot Chart from the Boy Scouts of America

We continue in life to use knots for a multitude of utilitarian purposes. We use them to put a 'bow' on a present, fasten items to cars or trucks, tie up boats to docks, end a thread, secure a flopping turkey ready for the oven, hitch up to a post, secure a dock, tie a tie, tie a cloth belt, knit a scarf and secure straggling tomato plants to stacks.

We use them daily around the house, cottage, garden and our work sites seldom conscious of that rudimentary knot tying skill that we learned so very long ago.

Today, though, because of the pervasiveness of newer time-saving inventions like the zipper, Velcro and plastic zip-locking clasps, we are in danger of losing this ancient craft: a well-tied knot.

Enter David Lambert.

David Lambert, Canada's Master Knot Tyer
David Lambert, Canada's Master Knot Tyer

Dave Lambert, 61, has been tying knots, like us all, since he was a kid. But he really got hooked in his forties after spending a month alone canoeing and camping in the North Ontario bush.

When he retired, he picked up the definitive Ashley Book of Knots by a third-generation New Bedford Massachusetts seaman and artist, Clifford Ashley.

First published in 1944 after 11 years of research by Ashley, this "bible" of knots remains the indisputable knot tyer's encyclopedia and reference manual. It is filled with detailed illustrations for over 4000 knots.

What separates an amateur like you and me from a Master knot tyer like Dave Lambert? In a word, patience.

The standing test for an accomplished knot tyer is the time-honoured 'Two Minute Challenge'. Knot tyers must demonstrate a keen focus and agile proficiency tying six relatively common knots - the Reef Knot, Clove Hitch, Sheepshank, Round Turn 2-half Hitch, Sheet Bend and the Bowline - within the given time frame.

The best of the bunch can do it in well under 30 seconds.

In the following video, Dave shows us how:

Go on, give it a try: The Six Knot Challenge.

The Six Knot Challenge (Image Credit: Knot Canada)
The Six Knot Challenge (Image Credit: Knot Canada)

As a member of the Southern Ontario Knot Tyers, Dave Lambert and a small cohort of local knotting enthusiasts will be hosting the Semi-Annual Meeting of the International Guild of Knot Tyers (North American Branch) in Hamilton in the fall of 2014.

Logo of the Southern Ontario Knot Tyers
Logo of the Southern Ontario Knot Tyers

The conference will be hosted in the upstairs loft at the Coach House at Dundurn Castle over October 3-5. Knotting participants are welcome to register for $35. (NB: The registration cut-off date is August 15.)

One of the highlights of this event will be a talk on Saturday night by Gill Bibby from the Hamilton Scourge Project.

For those who don't know, two American schooners, the Hamilton and the Scourge, capsized in Lake Ontario in 1813 in approximately 100 meters of water. These two shipwrecks are the only complete 1812 'war ready' ships in the world. Naturally, a detailed recap of their Great Lakes adventure will be an enticing yarn for knot tying enthusiasts.

(Curious sidebar trivia: The American-named Scourge, originally called the Lord Nelson and owned by a Mr. James Crooks, was a British merchant schooner that had a carrying capacity of about fifty tons. It was seized and commandeered by the advancing Americans for their use during that war. After the skirmish, Mr. Crooks tried to reclaim title and damages for his sunken ship, citing illegal seizure before the declaration of war. The defeated US government agreed, but it took over a hundred years, until 1927, before those damages were rightfully paid out by the United States Government to the Government of Canada, and then dispersed to Mr. Crooks' surviving 25 beneficiaries. The total, after legal deductions, was $15,546.63.)

On Sunday, October 5, from 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM, there will be a public 'Open House' of members knots and knot tying at Dundurn Castle's Coach House. (See a map.)

Dundurn Castle Coach house logo - Relink to MAP link as above.
Dundurn Castle Coach house logo - Relink to MAP link as above.

Consider it a welcome opportunity to learn something new about a very old-world craft. Your life could well depend on it, even if it is a hangman's noose, monkey fist, or cat-o'-nine-tails.

Not just for pirates or seamen, a well-fashioned knot - whether in rope, braided cord or coloured thread - holds an intrinsic ingenuity, tensile strength and an honest hard-earned beauty.

Just think about that the next time you quickly go about tying up those shoes.

A mid-career Golden Horseshoe artist and author, Lindsay is available for commissions and assignments via 'mlhpro' at 'hotmail' dot 'com'. See samples at http://canadadaPHOTOGRAPHY.blogspot.com.

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By Robert D (anonymous) | Posted February 08, 2014 at 11:31:13

Wow, very interesting, and a great youtube video. It's nice to see how versatile something like rope can be when used by someone who has the proper skills.

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By Missy2013 (registered) - website | Posted February 08, 2014 at 20:08:31

Thanks Robert D. And yes, totally agree - rope can be very interesting!

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By missy2013 (registered) - website | Posted September 24, 2015 at 16:28:26

Thrilled to announce that the short film about David Lambert has just been accepted into the 10th Annual Hamilton Film Festival. It will be showing under Documentary Shorts, at the Elaine May Theatre, 25 Dundurn Street N., Wednesday, November 4th at 7pm - with a bunch of other great-looking films. Woohoo! Come and check it out on the BIG SCREEN - http://www.hamiltonfilmfestival.com/

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By Missy2013 (registered) - website | Posted October 13, 2015 at 14:28:45

Correction: Showing at The Staircase Theatre, 27 Dundurn Street N. Line up of Documentary shorts start at 7pm.

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