Spray deck

A spraydeck (or spraycover or sprayskirt) is a flexible cover for a boat, in particular for a kayak or a canoe. It is used in whitewater, inclement weather or sport to prevent water from entering the boat while allowing one or more passengers to sit in the boat and propel the boat by paddling or rowing.

A spraydeck is a sheet made out of water-tight cloth (for example, rubberized or impregnated cloth) sized to fit over the opening, or cockpit, of the canoe or kayak.

A spraydeck has an opening for each passenger. Each opening likewise is encircled by a line or elastic string running in a hollow seam on the edge of the hole. This makes it possible to tighten the spraydeck around the body of the passenger.

Kayak spraydeck

Spraydecks are worn by kayakers in most conditions, but especially on rough water and in inclement weather, to prevent water entering the kayak's cockpit. On a kayak, the spraydeck is secured to a rim surrounding the cockpit with a line or elastic string called a rand. The line or string runs in a hollow seam along the edge of the spraydeck, alternatively elastic cord is attached directly to the edge of the spraydeck, and is tightened around the rim of the kayak's cockpit or stretched over it. The fastening may be pulled tight or held so by its elasticity, this prevents water infiltration while allowing passengers to quickly release it if the boat should capsize. To aid easy release during a capsize a grab loop is attached at the front of the spraydeck which the kayaker can use to pull the spraydeck free. A properly sealed spraydeck will allow a kayaker to perform an eskimo roll and continue paddling without having to bail out.

Spray

Spray can refer to:

  • Spray (liquid drop)
  • Aerosol spray
  • Blood spray
  • Road/tire spray, kicked up from a vehicle tire
  • Snow spray, a spray that creates artificial snow fall
  • Spray (mathematics), a type of vector field in differential geometry defined on the tangent bundle of a manifold
  • Spray (band), a British synthpop band
  • Spray (video game), a 2008 video game for Nintendo's Wii video game console
  • Spray, North Carolina, a former mill town in Rockingham County, North Carolina, now part of Eden, North Carolina
  • Spray (sailing vessel), the ship used in Joshua Slocum's solo circumnavigation in the late 19th century
  • Spray Network, a Swedish Internet company
  • USS Spray (ID-2491), a trawler in commission in the United States Navy from 1918 to 1919
  • USS Spray (SP-308), a motorboat ordered delivered to the United States Navy in 1917 for use as a patrol vessel but never taken over by the Navy
  • Solar flare

    A solar flare is a sudden flash of brightness observed near the Sun's surface. It involves a very broad spectrum of emissions, requiring an energy release of up to 6 × 1025joules of energy (roughly the equivalent of 160,000,000,000 megatons of TNT, over 25,000 times more energy than released from the impact of Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 with Jupiter). Flares are often, but not always, accompanied by a spectacular coronal mass ejection. The flare ejects clouds of electrons, ions, and atoms through the corona of the sun into space. These clouds typically reach Earth a day or two after the event. The term is also used to refer to similar phenomena in other stars, where the term stellar flare applies.

    Solar flares affect all layers of the solar atmosphere (photosphere, chromosphere, and corona), when the plasma medium is heated to tens of millions of Kelvin, while the cosmic-ray-like electrons, protons, and heavier ions are accelerated to near the speed of light. They produce radiation across the electromagnetic spectrum at all wavelengths, from radio waves to gamma rays, although most of the energy is spread over frequencies outside the visual range and for this reason the majority of the flares are not visible to the naked eye and must be observed with special instruments. Flares occur in active regions around sunspots, where intense magnetic fields penetrate the photosphere to link the corona to the solar interior. Flares are powered by the sudden (timescales of minutes to tens of minutes) release of magnetic energy stored in the corona. The same energy releases may produce coronal mass ejections (CME), although the relation between CMEs and flares is still not well established.

    Spray (sailing vessel)

    The Spray was an 36-foot-9-inch (11.20 m) oyster sloop which Joshua Slocum rebuilt and single-handedly sailed around the world, the first voyage of its kind. The Spray was lost with Captain Slocum aboard sometime on or after November 14, 1909, after sailing from Vineyard Haven, Massachusetts, bound for South America.

    History

    In 1892, a friend, Captain Eben Pierce, offered Slocum a ship that "wants some repairs". Slocum went to Fairhaven, Massachusetts to find that the "ship" was a rotting old oyster sloop named Spray, propped-up in a field. Despite the major overhaul of the ship, Slocum kept her name Spray, noting, "Now, it is a law in Lloyd's that the Jane repaired all out of the old until she is entirely new is still the Jane."

    Its days as a fishing boat, probably as a Chesapeake Bay oysterman, had come to an end by 1885, and it was a derelict, a slowly deteriorating hulk sitting in a makeshift ship's-cradle in a seaside meadow on Poverty Point in Fairhaven, Massachusetts, when Captain Eben Pierce of that town offered it to Joshua Slocum as a gift. Slocum came to Fairhaven to look at the Spray (sorry sight that it was), and he undertook to repair and refit it over the next thirteen months.

    Deck

    Deck may refer to:

    A level or platform

    Buildings and structures

  • Deck (bridge), the roadway surface of a bridge
  • Deck (building), an outdoor floor attached to a building made of only wood or woodlike
  • Another name for a storey
  • The concrete or tile area surrounding a swimming pool
  • Deck arch bridge, a type of bridge
  • Observation deck, a platform situated upon a tall architectural structure or natural feature
  • Orthotropic deck
  • Roof deck, the framing and sheathing to which roofing material is applied
  • Rooftop deck, also called a rooftop terrace
  • Vehicles

  • Deck (ship), a floor of a ship
    • The flight deck of an aircraft carrier
    • Gun deck, a term originally referred to a deck aboard a ship that was primarily used for mounting a cannon
    • Promenade deck, a deck found at most passenger ships
    • Well deck, a deck that is low than decks fore and aft, usually at the main deck
  • The flight deck of an aircraft carrier
  • Gun deck, a term originally referred to a deck aboard a ship that was primarily used for mounting a cannon
  • Promenade deck, a deck found at most passenger ships
  • Deck (surname)

    Deck is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Brian Deck, American record producer
  • John N. Deck (1921–1979), Canadian philosopher
  • Nathan Deck (born 1990), Canadian ice hockey player
  • René Deck (born 1945), Swiss footballer
  • Ronnie Deck (born 1977), American baseball player
  • Théodore Deck, 19th century French ceramicist
  • Woody Deck (born 1983), American poker player
  • News style

    News style, journalistic style or news writing style is the prose style used for news reporting in media such as newspapers, radio and television.

    News style encompasses not only vocabulary and sentence structure, but also the way in which stories present the information in terms of relative importance, tone, and intended audience. The tense used for news style articles is past tense.

    News writing attempts to answer all the basic questions about any particular event—who, what, when, where and why (the Five Ws) and also often how—at the opening of the article. This form of structure is sometimes called the "inverted pyramid", to refer to the decreasing importance of information in subsequent paragraphs.

    News stories also contain at least one of the following important characteristics relative to the intended audience: proximity, prominence, timeliness, human interest, oddity, or consequence.

    The related term journalese is sometimes used, usually pejoratively, to refer to news-style writing. Another is headlinese.

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