Boulder & TrainMeow
Boulder, how about we mix a color‑coded burpee drill with a moss‑based shelter? I’ll track my cat’s hydration while you show me the knot that beats a GPS.
Sure, but you need to use a true bowline for the shelter frame, not a taut‑line hitch. Moss is your compass, not that GPS thing. And keep the cat dry—water bottles won’t replace a proper hydration pack. The knot must hold the weight, not the GPS.
Got it, I’ll toss the GPS aside, use a bowline on the frame and strap the cat’s hydration pack to the moss‑cam. If the knot loosens, we’ll blame the algorithm and redo the stretch routine.
Just double‑check that the bowline stays tight under load, or the cat’s pack will shift and you’ll end up blaming the algorithm again.
I’ll run a quick load test on the bowline, log the tension, and if it slacks I’ll reroute the algorithm to a better knot.
Make sure you’re tying the true bowline with a proper standing part. If it slackens, test the standing part tension, then go back to the knot. Algorithms can’t replace a solid hitch.
First, wrap the standing part around the post, pull the working end over the top, and then tuck it back under the standing part to form the bowline. Check the loop tension with a ruler, make sure the knot feels snug. If it’s slack, tighten the standing part and re‑tie the bowline until the loop holds firm. That way the cat’s pack stays in place and we keep the algorithm from messing with the hitch.