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John Purbrick wrote:
In article et, W. Watson wrote: I've been browsing in some physics books, two in particular. "Physics Simplified" by Epstein and "Mad About Physics" by Potter and Jardonski (sp?). The idea of both books is to pose puzzlers and then explain their answers. Both have more than a handful of questions that apply to boating. One question involves undertow that is created by a sharp turn in a river or stream. Another concerns flow from a narrow channel into a wide channel and vice versa. I've certainly observed an effect like this at bends in a river. What happens is that the river undercuts the bank on the outside of the bend, and piles up loose material on the inside, creating a sandbar. You have to watch for downed trees hanging off that outside bank! But there's also likely to be circulating water just off the sandbar, as the main current passes by closer to the outside of the bend. What can happen is that you come along at a good clip, you see the bend ahead, and you say, "Might get pushed into the bank--might hit strainers--stay well to the inside!" So you head to the inside of the bend, you think staying out in the center far enough not to run into the sandbar. But what happens is that the bow gets into the circulating water behind the sandbar while the stern is still in the main current, being carried downstream. The result is that the boat turns suddenly and unexpectedly. Usually it's just an embarrassing thing, not dangerous, but it can be puzzling as you think there's a smooth flow of water around the curve. The right course seems to be to stay just in the downstream flow in the middle of the river, neither getting swept to the outside nor getting turned by the different speeds of flow. Interesting. That's fairly close to what I had in mind, although it's kind of tough to explain it. My question borders on suppose we are back 400 years ago and know almost nothing about modern paddling techniques. Maybe I'm an indian (American) on a river in the midwest. The tribe has noticed something about the way water flows. Perhaps it's on a river the tribe has never seen before. How do I turn that into a response while paddling? Perhaps another way of thinking about this is to assume you are blindfolded and paddling down the river, and you are with a companion. He says, "Small eddy dead ahead." What do you do to prepare for it? As another example, maybe more realistic, suppose you are given some sort of waterflow map of a river that you have never been on. How do you prepare for it, tactically or technique wise, without ever having been on it and only knowing from the map of a written description what to expect? I guess this gets down to how do you analyze water flow and your reaction to it in order to navigate it? -- Wayne T. Watson (Watson Adventures, Prop., Nevada City, CA) (121.015 Deg. W, 39.262 Deg. N) GMT-8 hr std. time) Obz Site: 39° 15' 7" N, 121° 2' 32" W, 2700 feet "To a person carrying a hammer, everything looks like a nail."--Old saying Web Page: home.earthlink.net/~mtnviews |
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