ONE-PAGE REFERENCE
Knot Reference
The five knots, the steps, and the one rule that matters. Everything that lives on the laminated card, pulled together in one place so a kid never has to hunt across six weeks of lessons to find a knot.
Hit print and the whole reference comes out on one sheet. Laminate it and clip it to the vest.
THE ONE RULE THAT MATTERS
Wet it or regret it.
Lubricate every knot before you seat it. Saliva or a quick dip in the stream, then cinch slowly. A dry knot can lose up to 30% of its strength to friction heat as it tightens. Wet it, pull it slow, leave a short tag, and trim. That one habit is the difference between landing the fish and telling the story about the one that broke off.
THE FIVE AT A GLANCE
Five Knots, One Card
Teaching order, not difficulty order. Each knot reuses a motion from the one before it, so the set builds on itself. Use thick cord or a shoelace for ages 6 to 10 before anyone touches real tippet.
| # | KNOT | WHAT IT DOES | LEVEL | STEPS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Davy Knot | Fly to tippet (the beginner's go-to) | Beginner | 3 |
| 2 | Double Surgeon's | Join two lines / add tippet | Beginner | 4 |
| 3 | Improved Clinch | Fly to tippet (classic standard) | Intermediate | 5 |
| 4 | Perfection Loop | Loop at the leader butt | Intermediate | 4 |
| 5 | Blood Knot | Join two same-diameter lines | Advanced | 6 |
Warm-up for the youngest hands: before Knot 1, have 6 to 8 year-olds tie a plain overhand knot in a shoelace ("make a circle, the mouse runs through the hole, pull his tail"). Every knot below reuses that one motion, passing a tag end through a loop, so it builds confidence with zero frustration.
KNOT 1
The Davy Knot
Fly to tippet. The beginner's go-to: three steps, ties in under five seconds, a tiny profile, and it wastes almost no tippet. The first knot a kid should own.
FLY TO TIPPET · BEGINNER · 3 STEPS
The Davy Knot
WHAT IT IS FOR
Fly to tippet
DIFFICULTY
Beginner
HOLDING STRENGTH
Strong for its size; double it for more
THE STEPS
- Pass the tippet through the hook eye, front to back. Pull about 4 inches of tag through.
- Cross the tag end OVER the standing line toward you, making one small loop.
- Pass the tag through that loop once, front to back.
- Wet it. Pinch the fly, pull the standing line firmly to cinch. Leave a 1/4-inch tag and trim.
Double Davy: for extra holding power, make a second pass through the loop before you cinch. Same knot, one more tuck.
COACH'S CUE
"Through the eye, cross over, through the loop, wet and pull." Always leave a 1/4-inch tag so the knot cannot slip under load.
KNOT 2
The Double Surgeon's Knot
Join two lines or add tippet. It is just an overhand tied with two lines and passed through twice, far more forgiving for cold or young fingers than the blood knot, and it works even when the two lines are different diameters.
JOIN TWO LINES · BEGINNER · 4 STEPS
The Double Surgeon's Knot
WHAT IT IS FOR
Join two lines / add tippet
DIFFICULTY
Beginner (easiest join)
HOLDING STRENGTH
Reliable; the kid-friendly join
THE STEPS
- Lay the leader and new tippet alongside each other, overlapping 4 to 6 inches, running opposite directions.
- Hold both lines as one and tie a simple overhand knot.
- Before pulling tight, pass BOTH tag ends through the loop one more time (that second pass makes it 'double').
- Wet it. Pull all FOUR ends evenly, two standing lines and two tags. Trim both tags.
COACH'S CUE
"Two lines, one loop, through it twice, pull all four." The #1 mistake is pulling only the standing lines, which makes the knot roll instead of stack and fail. Pull all four ends at the same time.
KNOT 3
The Improved Clinch
Fly to tippet, the classic standard. The most widely used fly knot in the world and a staple of the George Harvey and Joe Humphreys tradition. Once the Davy is solid, this is the next fly knot every angler should know.
FLY TO TIPPET · INTERMEDIATE · 5 STEPS
The Improved Clinch
WHAT IT IS FOR
Fly to tippet
DIFFICULTY
Intermediate
HOLDING STRENGTH
The 'improved' tuck roughly doubles a plain clinch
THE STEPS
- Pass the tippet through the hook eye. Pull 5 to 6 inches of tag through.
- Hold the fly and wrap the tag around the standing line 5 times (4 for heavier 3X and up).
- Pass the tag back through the small loop nearest the hook eye.
- Then pass it through the big loop you just created (this is the 'improved' tuck).
- Wet it. Pull the standing line and tag together to seat. Trim close.
Joe-link: a clean clinch lets the tuck cast turn over and drive the nymph down. The knot serves the drift.
COACH'S CUE
"Through the eye, wrap five, through the little door, then through the big door." Use 5 wraps for 4X and lighter, 4 wraps for 3X and heavier. Coils should be neat, never crossed, and never pull the tag alone.
KNOT 4
The Perfection Loop
A clean, in-line loop at the butt of the leader so it connects loop-to-loop to the welded loop on the fly line. Swap a whole leader in seconds. This is the join that makes the leader modular.
LOOP AT THE LEADER BUTT · INTERMEDIATE · 4 STEPS
The Perfection Loop
WHAT IT IS FOR
Loop at the leader butt
DIFFICULTY
Intermediate
HOLDING STRENGTH
Strong and perfectly in-line when tied right
THE STEPS
- Form a loop with the leader butt, bringing the line back over itself.
- Form a second loop in FRONT of the first; hold both with your fingers.
- Pass a bight of line between the two loops and pull it through.
- Pull the front loop through. Wet, tighten by pulling the standing line and the new loop, then trim.
Loop-to-loop: pass one loop through the other, then the far end through its own loop and snug into a square "handshake," never a twisted larkshead.
COACH'S CUE
The loop must sit perfectly in-line with the leader. If it sits at an angle, redo it: a twisted perfection loop makes the leader hinge at the connection and kills a natural drift.
KNOT 5
The Blood Knot
The traditional knot for joining two lines of similar diameter. Lower profile than the surgeon's, so it slides through the guides smoothly. The 'graduation' join in the George Harvey tradition: it takes more practice and rewards with a cleaner connection.
LINE TO LINE · ADVANCED · 6 STEPS
The Blood Knot
WHAT IT IS FOR
Join two same-diameter lines
DIFFICULTY
Advanced (ages 14 to 17)
HOLDING STRENGTH
Cleaner, lower-profile than the surgeon's
THE STEPS
- Overlap the two lines by about 6 inches, running opposite directions. Pinch the center.
- Wrap the left line around the right line 5 times; bring its end back to the center.
- Wrap the right line around the left line 5 times the OPPOSITE direction; bring its end back to center.
- The two tags should now point opposite directions through the center gap.
- Pass both tags through the center opening, each going the opposite way through the same gap.
- Wet thoroughly. Pull both standing lines slowly and evenly so the wraps stack neatly. Trim tags.
COACH'S CUE
Diameters must match within one X size or the knot slips. Wet thoroughly and cinch slowly: rushing makes it twist. This is a 14-to-17 knot; younger anglers use the Double Surgeon's instead.
WHY THIS ORDER
Teaching Order: Each Knot Reuses a Motion
The order on the card is built for kids, not for difficulty. Every knot reuses the same single motion, passing a tag end through a loop, so the set compounds instead of starting over each time.
THE SHOELACE RULE
For ages 6 to 10, drill every knot in thick cord or a shoelace before anyone touches real tippet. Big, visible, and forgiving for small fingers builds the muscle memory; the thin stuff comes once the motion is automatic. Two different-colored cords make the joining knots easy to see.
STEP IT THROUGH
Tie Each Knot, One Step at a Time
Knot trainer
Step Through the Five Knots
Pick a knot, then walk it one step at a time. Tie it three times unassisted and mark it learned.
The Davy Knot Learned
The beginner's go-to. Three moves, ties in under five seconds, tiny profile, wastes almost no tippet. The first knot a kid should own.
Remember Wet it before you seat it. A dry knot can lose up to 30% of its strength to friction heat as it tightens.
- Pass the tippet through the hook eye, front to back. Pull about 4 inches of tag through.
- Cross the tag end OVER the standing line toward you, making one small loop.
- Pass the tag through that loop once, front to back.
- Wet it. Pinch the fly, pull the standing line firmly to cinch. Leave a 1/4-inch tag and trim.
Coach's cue
"Through the eye, cross over, through the loop, wet and pull." Always leave a 1/4-inch tag so the knot cannot slip under load.
Double Davy: for extra holding power, make a second pass through the loop before you cinch. Same knot, one more tuck.
The Improved Clinch Learned
The most widely used fly knot in the world and a staple of the George Harvey and Joe Humphreys tradition. Once the Davy is solid, this is next.
Remember Wet it before you seat it. A dry knot can lose up to 30% of its strength to friction heat as it tightens.
- Pass the tippet through the hook eye. Pull 5 to 6 inches of tag through.
- Hold the fly and wrap the tag around the standing line 5 times (4 for heavier 3X and up).
- Pass the tag back through the small loop nearest the hook eye.
- Then pass it through the big loop you just created (this is the 'improved' tuck).
- Wet it. Pull the standing line and tag together to seat. Trim close.
Coach's cue
"Through the eye, wrap five, through the little door, then through the big door." Use 5 wraps for 4X and lighter, 4 wraps for 3X and heavier. Coils should be neat, never crossed, and never pull the tag alone.
Joe-link: a clean clinch lets the tuck cast turn over and drive the nymph down. The knot serves the drift.
The Double Surgeon's Knot Learned
Just an overhand tied with two lines and passed through twice. Far more forgiving for cold or young fingers than the blood knot, and it works even when the two lines are different diameters.
Remember Wet it before you seat it. A dry knot can lose up to 30% of its strength to friction heat as it tightens.
- Lay the leader and new tippet alongside each other, overlapping 4 to 6 inches, running opposite directions.
- Hold both lines as one and tie a simple overhand knot.
- Before pulling tight, pass BOTH tag ends through the loop one more time (that second pass makes it 'double').
- Wet it. Pull all FOUR ends evenly, two standing lines and two tags. Trim both tags.
Coach's cue
"Two lines, one loop, through it twice, pull all four." The #1 mistake is pulling only the standing lines, which makes the knot roll instead of stack and fail. Pull all four ends at the same time.
The Perfection Loop Learned
A clean, in-line loop at the butt of the leader so it connects loop-to-loop to the welded loop on the fly line. Swap a whole leader in seconds.
Remember Wet it before you seat it. A dry knot can lose up to 30% of its strength to friction heat as it tightens.
- Form a loop with the leader butt, bringing the line back over itself.
- Form a second loop in FRONT of the first; hold both with your fingers.
- Pass a bight of line between the two loops and pull it through.
- Pull the front loop through. Wet, tighten by pulling the standing line and the new loop, then trim.
Coach's cue
The loop must sit perfectly in-line with the leader. If it sits at an angle, redo it: a twisted perfection loop makes the leader hinge at the connection and kills a natural drift.
Loop-to-loop: pass one loop through the other, then the far end through its own loop and snug into a square "handshake," never a twisted larkshead.
The Blood Knot Learned
The traditional knot for joining two lines of similar diameter. Lower profile than the surgeon's, so it slides through the guides smoothly. The graduation join for teens.
Remember Wet it before you seat it. A dry knot can lose up to 30% of its strength to friction heat as it tightens.
- Overlap the two lines by about 6 inches, running opposite directions. Pinch the center.
- Wrap the left line around the right line 5 times; bring its end back to the center.
- Wrap the right line around the left line 5 times the OPPOSITE direction; bring its end back to center.
- The two tags should now point opposite directions through the center gap.
- Pass both tags through the center opening, each going the opposite way through the same gap.
- Wet thoroughly. Pull both standing lines slowly and evenly so the wraps stack neatly. Trim tags.
Coach's cue
Diameters must match within one X size or the knot slips. Wet thoroughly and cinch slowly: rushing makes it twist. This is a 14-to-17 knot; younger anglers use the Double Surgeon's instead.
Now Go Drill Them
This card is the reference. The schools teach the knots week by week, and the Knot Mastery Card tracks each one until it is automatic. Tie all five unassisted, three times each, and earn the Knot Tier badge.