What is driftwood?
Driftwood is a floating wood that ended on the coast due to elements. Many people connect this wood especially with the ocean, but you can also find it near lakes and rivers. Because wood can float for a long time, it is often bleached in the sun. Driftwood is a common source of fuel in the regions where it is washes, and is also used in works of art and creates structures from sculptures to fences depending on the appropriate type.
There are many sources for driftwood. For example, large branches can be reduced, for example, during the storms and occasionally rolled whole trees and travel to open water with currents. It can also come from destroyed ships and other human structures, sometimes it takes the form of a finished timber. During stormy weather, high winds and wool can cause a large accumulation of wood on the beaches; Some of them are washed back to the sea unless it is collected.
When the wood floats in water, it can be consumed by bacteria, colonized by various water life or covered algae. VnThe more bark layers are often removed and boring animals can dig a network of wood tunnels. When it is washes to the shore, the wooden wood is often extremely light after drying and can create an excellent Tinder source. People can also build structures from large protocols that have been washed to the shore on the beaches that are commonly concealed with it. These structures can be quite complicated, especially when efforts to build their structure are developed in a structurally healthy way.
Driftwood sculpture is not unusual in areas where large quantities are gathering. Some artists previously use floating wood as it is, while others can cut or cut it, use it to produce foundations for sculptures, picture frames and other crafts. Wood can also be used to make furniture, stick and fences. On the beach, driftwood provides shelter for a number of organisms loving coasts, from insects to molluscs.
In some areas, alluvial wood can become harassment. In a stormy weather, it may represent a navigation riskIKO in bays and entrance bays and many communities collect as much as possible when it is washed on the beach to prevent reinforcement to endanger the operation of ships. It is also difficult to walk on the beach, which is covered with alluvial wood, and some people find the aesthetics of covered coast, displeasure.