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The "Voodoo Hitch" - a magic tensioning hitch

Let's start with a little honest disclaimer right off the top: This bit of rope wizardry is probably not something you will use in very many climbing situations. However, if you’re an aficionado of #CraftyRopeTricks, well, this is one of the craftiest you’ll see! It's halfway between a knot and a magic trick. The day I learned it, I tied it a dozen times and was still scratching my head as to how it works.

The voodoo hitch is a way to add a moderate amount of easily adjustable tension to a fixed rope. (It's somewhat related to the the trucker’s hitch, an extremely useful knot that just about every outdoors person should know. Here's a nice short video that shows how to tie a trucker’s hitch.)

The voodoo hitch is known by a few different names. Some call it the rather boring “Transport hitch”, others the “PM hitch”, which stands for “Pure Magic”. (I've even heard it referred to as the WTF hitch. =^) The way I learned it is the “voodoo hitch”. You'll learn why it's called a voodoo hitch after you tied a few times and see how it miraculously holds tension when it sure likes like it wouldn’t.

Like the trucker’s hitch, the Voodoo creates a 3 :1 theoretical mechanical advantage - you need to pull 3 meters of rope through the system to move the load 1 meter. But, because of all the carabiners adding friction, the real world mechanical advantage he's pretty much 1:1.

Just get a climbing rope and a few carabiners and try out this rope sorcery. It's cool, magic, and fun.


Here’s what's nifty about the voodoo hitch (and how it differs from the trucker’s hitch:)

  • You can fine-tune the tension on the rope without untying and re-tying the knot.

  • There's no lock off half hitch required, the voodoo just magically holds tension by itself.

A few notes:

  • I was taught this knot in a canyoneering class using all clove hitches. Clove hitches work, but there are several other knots work fine too, such as a butterfly or figure 8 on a bight. I’m liking the butterfly knot, because it's easy to untie after it's been loaded.

  • You can use any kind of carabiners for this: lockers, non-lockers, large belay lockers or tiny wiregates.

  • You can use pulleys to make tensioning the system a bit easier, but don't use them everywhere. Friction holds the whole thing together, see below. If you use pulleys at every redirect point, it fails.

  • How does it work? Opposing tension, or friction, or voodoo, or magic, or something? A clever Alpinesavvy fan on Instagram (@govanathon) shared this: “3 stands on one side of the sliding carabiner, 2 stands on the other side. Moving one way lengthens 3 while shortening 2 so net tension increases. Moving the other way lengthens 2 while shortening 3 so net tension decreases. Friction on at least 1 redirect point is necessary to hold the tension or the rope will just feed through the system and loosen.”


Here’s a good article on the Voodoo hitch, along with this nice graphic. (Note, the end of the rope is fixed at point A.)

image: https://rigginglabacademy.com/voodoo-marcel-rodriguez/


As with pretty much anything related to learning knots, this is a better show than a tell. Check out this short (2:20) video that shows you exactly how to tie it.


Finally, if you really want to nerd out on the voodoo hitch, here is a deep-dive video from my pal Ryan at HowNOT2.com.