
thumb|A belayer in Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area|Red Rocks, Nevada
thumb|A belayer in Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area|Red Rocks, Nevada
In climbing and mountaineering, belaying comprises techniques used to create friction within a climbing protection system, particularly on a climbing rope, so that a falling climber does not fall very far. A climbing partner typically applies tension at the other end of the rope whenever the climber is not moving, and removes the tension from the rope whenever the climber needs more rope to continue climbing. The belay is the place where the belayer is anchored, which is typically on the ground, or on ledge (where it is also called a belay station) but may also be a hanging belay where the belayer themself is suspended from an anchor in the rock on a multi-pitch climb.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).