BL Workshop
Build a flagpole
Show your colors by building a flagpole for your camp. It’s easy if you have the pioneering skills.
Materials:
- Two 15 to 20-foot spars about 4 inches in diameter
- Four anchors
- Mallet
- Rope
- Flag
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VIDEO: See how to tie a clove hitch and attach spars together with a round lashing. |
Step One: Choose a spot for your flagpole, and lay both spars along the ground parallel with each other, with about a 4-5-foot overlap. The thickest, heaviest end of the biggest spar should be the bottom of the pole. The smallest spar will be the top of the pole.
Attach the two spars to each other by tying a clove hitch near the bottom of the smallest spar, and then wrapping the rope around both spars as tight as you can 15-20 times, then ending with a clove hitch around both spars. This is a round lashing.
Repeat the process at the top of the biggest spar.
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VIDEO: Learn how to tie a Lark’s Head knot. |
Step Two: Attach two lengths of rope to the middle section of both spars with a lark’s head knot. These are the ropes that will hold your pole up.
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VIDEO: See how to use square knots to attach the flag to the pole. |
Step Three: Attach a flag to your pole with a series of square knots. Raise your pole and lay the attached ropes out in a perimeter around the pole. Install anchors into the ground with the mallet at the bottom of each rope.
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VIDEO: See how to attach ropes to the anchors. |
Step Four: Attach ropes to anchors with a taut-line hitch.
Step Five: Step back and salute the flag.
Read 4 comments about “Build a flagpole”

Everyone knows that if you take oxygen away from a fire, the fire will go out. But what happens when you add extra oxygen?
February 7th, 2008 at 7:05 pm
common sense test-yes videos are terrific for instructions however not so transportble to camp with no electricity-diagrams would have been much more useful and practical
February 21st, 2008 at 1:35 pm
I think the videos are great! For those of us who have a hard time deciphering the diagrams the videos help further explain how to do the knots. I do agree, though, that pictures and diagrams would be a help while on a trip.
March 9th, 2008 at 1:05 am
The videos are brilliant!!! I agree with Scout Mom, for those of us who have a hard time deciphering the diagrams the videos are time saving and easy to understand medium of instruction. Simply awesome!!! Diagrams do help of course for memory aids after learning through the videos. But, given the choice of videos and diagrams, I would definitely prefer the videos. Learn the knots and techniques at home or at school thoroughly – put them into memory. In the field, it is operation time. It is time to put what one learns into practice without the hustle and bustle of carrying diagrams around and referring to them. Thank you Aaron Derr and the videos producer for this most instructive means of disseminating knowledge.
May 1st, 2008 at 4:56 pm
the video idea was good but it doesnt help while at a camp