Yes. When tornadoes move onto water (at which point they are called waterspouts) it can lift fish and occasionally larger creatures out of the water. There is at least one account of such a tornado lifting an alligator.
Not exactly. The high winds can, however, spray some water out of a swimming pool. A tornado can also damage the walls of above ground pools, causing water to spill out.
Bitchesf suck fdick
Bitchesf suck fdick
Bitchesf suck fdick
A tornado cannot actually be made of water. A tornado can occur on water and suck water into it, but it will still be mostly made of air.
Bitchesf suck fdick
suck all the water out and keep it out for 24 hrs and put new water in
If a tornado hits a body of water (at which point it is called a waterspout) it can "suck up" some unlucky fish. These fall back to earth a little later.
Suck it from a river using your mouth and then in a few hours you should get it back which you can deposit into your pool.
how it gets water is from the roots that suck the water from the lake, swamp, river or any kind of big hole with water in it besides a pool
Tornadoes suck air inward and upward. Close to the center of the tornado there is little inward motion. There the wind mostly moves in a circle and upwards.
A pool vacuum leak could mean that there is a leak in the vacuum hose that you use to vac the pool. Or it could mean that there is a leak on the suction side of the pump. It could be located somewhere between the skimmer and the inlet of the pump. At the pump it could mean that there is a leak at the pump seal or the pump lid or a pump gasket. Some of these leaks will not produce water at those leaks they may only suck air into the system. k
The pool pump does suck the water from the pool. Then it goes thru the filter and (if you use have the following) thru the heater and chlorinator then back into the pool. So - nothing will keep it from sucking water from the pool - but that's a good thing. Now - if you set the valve to a different setting - then it might actually send the water to a waste line - maybe that's what you meant. If that's the case -then the pool pump will eventually drain your whole pool if you have it set to get the water from the bottom drain (another valve).