A circle. The circle stands for a controlled area which means that there are rules to follow. in this case it would mean slowing down the slowest speed while maintaining steering control.
A circle. The circle stands for a controlled area which means that there are rules to follow. in this case it would mean slowing down the slowest speed while maintaining steering control.
A circle marker is a symbol on a regulatory marker that is used to mark a no wake or idle speed area.
A circle. The circle stands for a controlled area which means that there are rules to follow. in this case it would mean slowing down the slowest speed while maintaining steering control.
A circle marker is a symbol on a regulatory marker that is used to mark a no wake or idle speed area.
A circle. The circle stands for a controlled area which means that there are rules to follow. in this case it would mean slowing down the slowest speed while maintaining steering control.
A circle. The circle stands for a controlled area which means that there are rules to follow. in this case it would mean slowing down the slowest speed while maintaining steering control.
A crossed diamond is used to mark a swimming area. This is considered a 'Boat Exclusion Area," and may be placed outside spots such as a dam, rapids, swim area, etc.
A circle. The circle stands for a controlled area which means that there are rules to follow. in this case it would mean slowing down the slowest speed while maintaining steering control.
a human figure in profile in water (wavy line) from the torso up, with an arm raised with elbow bent (like an Australian crawl stroke).
White tubular buoy, orange diamond with black cross in it. Tells boaters to keep out.
Question:Which symbol on a regulatory marker indicates a dam or stumps?a:squareb:crossed diamondc:circled:diamondYour Answer:cCorrect:dExplanation:Non-lateral markers are navigation aids that give information other than the edges of safe water areas. The most common are regulatory markers that are white and use orange markings and black lettering. Danger area markers (with diamonds) warn of dangers such as rocks, shoals, construction, dams, or stumps. Always proceed with caution and keep a safe distance. Never assume that every hazard will be marked by a buoy.
It is a control buoy- indicates speed limits, no-wake zones, etc
This is a non-lateral marker. It can indicate a controlled area, such as no wake. It can be an informational marker, a "keep out" marker, or a warning marker (Dam, Rock, etc)
A crossed diamond is used to mark a swimming area. This is considered a 'Boat Exclusion Area," and may be placed outside spots such as a dam, rapids, swim area, etc.
Dimond