[1]I live on Vancouver Island... it rains a lot here. This rain
supports our beautiful rain forests, but it also collects in dragon
boats... I figure the average 12m boat will hold about 400 gallons
(but who's counting?), and, more to the point, require a lot of
bailing. (I wonder how many 1-gallon detergent containers with
their bottoms cut off are in use today as bailers?) This time of
year (that would be "winter"), we get a lot of rain, and those of
us with boats in the water devote a lot of our time to bailing out
the boats. No more! Thanks to "Charge'n'Flow," a neat submersible
180 GPH pump, bailing dragon boats is no longer a physical
exercise. Huah! [2] This pump is easy to use... first
submerge the pump in the water, then plug it in to the battery and
it does the rest. [3]Charge'n'Flow Battery UnitAfter bailing out
boats for several years, I found it easy to adapt and move on -
this pump makes the job easy, because all you have to do is sit and
watch... a solution that fits comfortably into my lifestyle :-) [4]
It may not look like much, but this mighty little pump will move up
to 90 gallons of water in 30 minutes... that, my friends, is my
kind of tool :-) [1]
http://dragonboatpaddlers.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/Charge-n-flow_kit.jpg
[2]
http://dragonboatpaddlers.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/Charge-n-flow-001-half.jpg
[3]
http://dragonboatpaddlers.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/Charge-n-flow-002-half1.jpg
[4]
http://dragonboatpaddlers.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/Charge-n-flow-003-half.jpg
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