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stick ((3))
DCHP-1 (pre-1967)
Entry from the DCHP-1 (pre-1967)
This entry may contain outdated or offensive information, terms, and examples.
1v. — Lumbering
a log caught on a snag or obstruction when being transported.
See: hang-up(defs. 1a and 1b).
Quotations
1827
Farther up the river . . . is a noted ridge of rocks, called the Hog's Back, from the circumstance of raftsmen with their wares sticking on it in coming down the stream.
1849
The process is to break up the raft and commit the spars to the stream. About an hour after that perhaps two or three sticks reach Peterborough, the rest are left sticking here and there on rocks, dams and islands.
1854
The whole year's labor is thus lost from the timber "sticking" as it is called, unless heavy rains should come to the rescue. . . .
2v. — Esp. North
prepare sticks of fish for drying or freezing.
See: stick ((1)) (def. 2)
Quotations
1942
Now for sticking: Willow sticks are cut about four-foot long and pointed at one end. . . . The white [fish] is slit through near the tail, just above the vertebral column. . . .