I hope you go. I need the vicarious experience! Ha ha. Besides you always take great pictures of your trips.Maybe I take canoe out after work this morning. Get a little small mouth action, and canoeing in before it gets hot out. This river loop normally takes about 6 hours to drift, and it's only a couple miles, by road, back to vehicle. I have done this a couple of times in the past. Right now it's 3:30 am, lunch time and I think I'll catch a few zzz's for lunch. It's 65 degrees out and there's a nice breeze blowing through vehicle. I'll let you know and send pictures later.
They think of neat stuff, I would imagine some of it is thought up after the fact, still neat. Like an iceberg then, only mean....a strainer or sweeper is a canoe term for a downed tree in the river. The apparent danger is the you only see a portion of the downed tree and not the hidden portion. That is why whistle cords and life jackets have snap off buckles. If you should collide with a strainer, fall down underneath and get caught [and people do] you can release the buckles.
I don't know of any hobbie today that doesn't have it's own vocabulary. Killeroy and I talked about this very thing one time. When I first started in amateur radio, I thought I was at a different planet.It's like everything else - we come up with our own jargon that becomes fixed after awhile. What is sometimes frustrating to me is when I'm with an individual who doesn't know the terms. You are telling your partner to "take the chute, take the chute" and he doesn't know what you are saying.
CHUTE. A fast current where part of a stream is compressed and flows between two obstructions.
You're going to hate me, but what are whistle cords? I know what life jackets are...surprise, surprise, but whistle cords is new to me. It's not found in the dictionary....a strainer or sweeper is a canoe term for a downed tree in the river. The apparent danger is the you only see a portion of the downed tree and not the hidden portion. That is why whistle cords and life jackets have snap off buckles. If you should collide with a strainer, fall down underneath and get caught [and people do] you can release the buckles.
-----> Not at all - whistle cords are simply whistles attached to a cord of some sort. Lanyard is probably the better word to use. The difference is that they can be disconnected without being pulled over the head. The two connectors shown in the picture can easily be pulled apart in an emergency.You're going to hate me, but what are whistle cords? I know what life jackets are...surprise, surprise, but whistle cords is new to me. It's not found in the dictionary.