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Can you girth hitch a Dyneema sling to a picket?


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If you’re trying to shave weight on an alpine climb, you might wonder if it's okay to girth hitch a sling directly to a picket.

(Yeah I know, cool Euro climbers don't use pickets and make an anchor out of their buried ice axe, cigarette pack, or whatever, but that's a different topic.)

  • Does this dangerously weaken the sling?

  • Is the sling gonna get cut on the sharper bend radius of the picket hole?

  • Should I use the sling full strength (about 22 kN) and clip it with a carabiner like normal?

All good questions! I was curious about them as well. So I took a visit to the gear breaking lab of mad scientist Ryan Jenks, aka Mr. HowNOT2, to find out.

We used older Dyneema slings hitched through the middle hole on an older style MSR Coyote picket.

The girth hitch tested at a bit over 10 kN.

(Yes, with a limited sample size of 1.) For me, that's acceptable for a crevasse rescue anchor, because your picket is going to pull out of the snow before you approach that much force.

Not that you should ever be generating a load like that in a standard crevasse rescue to begin with . . .

But hey, if you want to use the sling full strength at 22+ kN, then clip it to the picket with a carabiner, your choice!

Next we tried a basket hitch. As expected, that was a bit stronger, around 16 kN.


After that, just for fun, we doubled the sling through the hole; a double basket hitch. (Yes, we kept using the same picket for every test, so it might've been a weakened after the first two .)

Here's what happened. The sling it was fine. The picket broke 18.4 kN!


Want to see a YouTube short showing the break test, and a way to tie this with a bowline? That's in the complete premium member article.



Premium members can read the complete article here: