I think it is confusing, and counterproductive to apply the name of the bowline to just any tangle that ends with a loop.
As was pointed out by Xarax, it isn't just "any tangle that ends
with [an eye]" --but, rather, one formed in such a way as to
have some core *knot* through which a collaring bight is
reeved. In
this sense, the nomenclature is rather intuitive
and instructive (in the cases of "clove"/"cow"/"constrictor"/...
one might have to further figure out how that "core knot"
is to be oriented).
BUT, I too have tried to form a more restrictive definition
of a
"bowline" --in part, to respond to such things as
the
How many bowlines are there? researches (such as
Xarax links to above with his "(1)"). One should know what
it is one is setting out to count, after all! And, yes, among
those lists typically come knots such as you disclaim; we
have also seen "new" knots given the moniker, as though
to try to elevate their worth immediately --marketing stuff.
My thinking has been that a
*bowline* has as its fundamental
component a
turNip --which might be a
round turn (or more),
from which the rope flows into the knot's eye. I then distinguish
"anti-bowlines" from "bowlines" based upon which direction the
tail goes through this central nip. I'm willing to give up the collar,
and so include the so-called "Myrtle" eyeknot. And I'm not keen
to insist on a
spiral vs. less-inclined loop, even a spiral
oriented in the *opening* way (i.e., wanting to straighten),
which I have seen
bowlines of the old sort capsize into,
anyway (though at that point, I'm going to call them *former*
bowlines 
).
I've also wanted to distinguish between such
bowlinesque knots
that lead from this nipping part directly into the eye and those
that do something else, such as ... well, make a 2nd turNip as
for the
clove-hitch version of the
water bowline or some
other knots I've discovered in which the rope here leads to a
collaring of the eye legs --a feature that might make the difference
between holding and slipping out, in slippery HMPE rope.
But this gets complicated. "false bowline" has been one name
that has occurred to me, but I think that's overly strong in
connotation; rather, just some sense of *delay*/*intermediation*
is wanted for his indirect path to the eye.
The
Eskimo bowline poses a problem: the closing bight
which collars an eye leg can be drawn snug such that the
core knot is a
crossing knot (roughly a
Munter hitch ),
and that seems reasonably distinct from the
turNip, as it
sort of *collars* itself. --and this is a matter of collar size,
nothing more!
Yosemite finishes, to me look mainly cosmetic.
I've never been a fan of this, either, which seemed to ask
too much of a stiff rope in taking a 1-diameter wrap with
the tail, and then only wedging it into the not so terribly
nipping-gripping collar. But it has a long history with rockclimbers
and must work adequately well; only so much extra securing
is needed in order to arrest the loosening to which the common
bowline is prone. One fellow --viz., Craig Connally, author
of
The Mountaineering Handbook-- goes so far as to claim
that his testing shows the
YoBowl stronger than a
fig.8
eyeknot --I call "bogus"!
the "fig 8" that is formed is not loaded on the end, ...
Actually, there was just some chatter on an ACA canyoneering forum
about tying with the bight so that this "end" is a bight-end and it
can be loaded, as an adjacent tie-in point to the SPart.
(Rob Chisnall showed doing this as an aid to providing climbing
instruction, long ago.)
The most sensible extensions would preserve the turNip, resist straightening of its sprial form, ...
Hmmm, you know, I think that "spiral" isn't right, here :
rather, the would-be *spiral* is twisted
against the direction
of opening (initially, from a mere turn start, more obviously
being a spiral than a(n imperfect) ring)) in the common
bowline,and my "anti-bowlines" are challenged to come close to this
sort of orientation, usually.
Grommers does not show any eskimo bowline, which is the form most resistant to ring loading.
My option for a more secure bowline would be the eskimo with a Janus finish. ...
I'm not sure what you mean by the finish, but, yes, tying what
Grommers shows in #32-33 but such that the tail closes the eye
by flowing through the turNip in the
opposite direction
--i.e., connect the tail to his shown end, and leave as the new
end the old entry strand-- seems a good knot. In a way, it lets
one be "a winner either way," no matter which side of the turNip
you enter, just be sure to collar both a leg & the SPart (realizing
that this "collaring" requires that one go around the appropriate
part given the particular direction of entry!).
As for resisting ring-loading, the
"left-handed" bowline does that
even without a further tuck.
--dl*
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