Handy-Necklace `Chenook` - PhoneCord - Smartphone Lenyard / Smartphone Necklace
All Hands on Deck - With the phone chain `Chenook`, you can save your communications center in a seaworthy manner and always ready for action on the man (or woman). Your smartphone is firmly and securely covered in a crystal clear silicone case, which hangs on an indestructible sailing robe in maritime optics.
Phone calls and listening to music are possible without annoying cable wooling, because connections and charging socket on the phone are not covered by the cordage. The sail rope is 6 mm thick and can be varied in length by moving the stainless steel closure.
No matter if you are sailing around Cape Horn or training a hand full of seals, thanks to the Smartphone Necklace `Chenook`, you have the fins free and your smartphone always and stylish within the 3 miles zone.
The smartphone chain made at Hamburg's waterfront, is available in different colors and suitable for the current popular mobile phone models.
Material and Components:
- Sailing rope 6 mm (round wovent)
- Lenghts: 160 cm (2 x 80 cm)
- Color: orange / red
- Closure: Ring Shutter, stainless Steel
- Rigging: marine-blue
Chenook:
The Chinook [ʃɪnʊk, tʃɪnʊk] is a warm fall wind on the eastern side of the Rocky Mountains in the inner west of North America. Here the Great Plains and the Canadian prairie meet several mountain ranges. The meteorological event of the Chinook wind is similar to the Föhn in the Alps. The Rocky Mountains are about the same height as the Alps, but the Chinook is even drier and warmer than the Föhn.
Falsely, the origin of the name Chinook in Alberta and Montana was translated to snow-eater. However, it is actually the name of the Chinook people who lived in the northwestern US along the lower Columbia River. Originally known as Chinook was the humid, warm northwest wind blowing from the ocean to the interior of the country.
A strong chinook wind can completely dissolve a thirty-centimeter thick blanket of snow within a day, whereby the snow not only melts, but partially evaporates in the dry wind.
It has been observed that chinook winds have often increased the winter air temperatures from -20 ° C to +10 ° C to +20 ° C within a few hours or days. Thereafter, the air temperature fell back to the initial level. The largest recorded temperature change within 24 hours by the chinook wind was measured on January 15, 1972 in Loma, Montana, with the temperature rising from -48 ° C to +9 ° C.