| strainer |
Device used to trap foreign materials, preventing blockage of the water passageway in urinals.
Ãâó: www.americanstandard.ca/consumer/feedback/faq_05_g...
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| strainer |
This is what happens when trees, trash, and other assorted items become lodged in rocks in the path of the current. Boats and boaters who float into strainers tend to stay there, so avoid these, period. If you do by some remote chance find yourself swimming into one, try to climb up onto whatever's in there -- you might be able to get over it and float off the other side, or possibly climb out of the water. Many undercut rocks have strainers under them, creating an extreme hazard.
Ãâó: www.rockandwater.net/pa-ww/terms.html
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| strainer |
The deadliest trap on the river! When water pours through the branches of a fallen tree, or through a pile of rocks or ice, it produces a strainer. When you drain a pot of spaghetti into a strainer, the water goes through and the spaghetti is trapped. Now imagine that you are the pasta and that the pot of water never runs out. That's what happens if you, with or without your boat, get into a strainer. Even with a gentle current, strainers are bad. ...
Ãâó: paddlenow.com/html/dictionary%20Q-T.html
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| strainer |
an obstacle, such as a tree, that lets water flow through freely but traps swimmers, boats, and debris
Ãâó: www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/nge/Article.jsp
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| strainer |
An obstacle, often a fallen tree or logjam, that rests in the water with part of its structure under the surface. The current will pull ( eg boats, bodies,) down and through whatever subsurface appendages are down there, " staining them out of the flow."
Ãâó: explore.tpwd.state.tx.us/hill/rry/kayak/terminolog...
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