The
cowboy bowline (also called Dutch bowline),
French bowline, and
Portuguese bowline are variations of the bowline, each of which makes one loop. (Names of knots are mostly traditional and may not reflect their origins.) A
running bowline can be used to make a noose which draws tighter as tension is placed on the standing part of the rope. The
Birmingham bowline has two loops; the working part is passed twice around the standing part (the "rabbit" makes two trips out of the hole and around the tree). Other two-loop bowline knots include the
Spanish bowline and the
bowline on the bight; these can be tied in the middle of a rope without access to the ends. A
triple bowline is used to make three loops. An
Eskimo bowline or Cossack knot is a bowline where the running end goes around the loop-start rather than the main part and has a more symmetric triangular shaped knot. A slipped version of the Cossack knot is called
Kalmyk loop. File:Birmingham_Bowline_Loose.jpg|Two-loop Birmingham bowline before tightening and dressing the knot. Two turns taken around the standing part of the line form two loops. File:Four knots.jpg|Variants: File:Bowline to 6 2 knot.gif|If a bowline is tied and the two free ends of the rope are brought together in the simplest way, the
mathematical knot obtained is the so-called
6₂ knot. The sequence of necessary moves is depicted here. ==See also==