On 24 July 2018 at 18:49, François Lacombe
wrote:
>
> No because water always flows, look at the left picture on the danger sign.
>
Sorry, couldn't see the water - just looked like a dry gully
It's just that sometimes, hydroelectric operator releases big amount of
> water wich completely and q
The tag 'hazard' can be found on the whitewater wiki page, so I guess whatever
tag is found here would be worth mentioned there.
Yves
Le 24 juillet 2018 12:51:39 GMT+02:00, ael a écrit :
>On Mon, Jul 23, 2018 at 10:48:05PM +0200, François Lacombe wrote:
>>
>> As the discussion about intermitte
On Mon, Jul 23, 2018 at 10:48:05PM +0200, François Lacombe wrote:
>
> As the discussion about intermittent/seasonal/... on waterways goes on,
> there is another thing to map: how waterways banks can be dangerous due to
> sudden rise or lower water level.
The obvious tag is hazard, but for some in
Hi Dave,
I agree about monsooon or snow melt.
Regarding industrial operations involving downstream rivers, there are
precise restrictions and perimeters may be publicly displayed like this
https://imgur.com/a/TLhZcgE
Regarding this particular place :
The stream https://www.openstreetmap.org/way/6
Hi
This is another one of those discussion which comes up every year or so.
The perception of danger is subjective; which never fits well within OSM.
Waterways are not dangerous in themselves. They are inanimate objects.
They don't jump out & attack you as you walk by. It's the naive way
peop
Hi Graeme,
2018-07-24 0:12 GMT+02:00 Graeme Fitzpatrick :
>
> On 24 July 2018 at 06:48, François Lacombe
> wrote:
>
>>
>> Then what could be the best way to tag it?
>> No existing tag sounds suitable for this, even the idea of a single
>> "permanence" key.
>>
>
> I think intermittent would still
On 24 July 2018 at 06:48, François Lacombe
wrote:
>
> Then what could be the best way to tag it?
> No existing tag sounds suitable for this, even the idea of a single
> "permanence" key.
>
I think intermittent would still be correct, because the water is only
sometimes there?
Saw reference to
h