tumpline การใช้
- The women, wearing patadyong and beaded necklaces, carry baskets with a tumpline
- In the 1920s there was a man in Mexico City who delivered pianos on his back using a tumpline.
- The pack is carried by two shoulder straps, and sometimes a tumpline worn over the top of the head.
- One pack would be carried by a tumpline and one on the back ( strangulated hernia was a common cause of death ).
- Out of his small shoe shop on the waterfront, Poirier began building a new style canoe pack with a tumpline, sternum strap, and umbrella holder.
- Out of his small shoe shop on the waterfront, Camille began building a new style canoe pack with a tumpline, sternum strap, and umbrella holder.
- The indigenous natives in Mexico ( and other Latin American countries ) traditionally have used the tumpline for carrying heavy loads, such as firewood, baskets ( including baskets loaded with construction materials and dirt for building ), bird cages, and furniture.
- A "'tumpline "'( / tump-lyne / ) is a strap attached at both ends to a sack, backpack, or other luggage and used to carry the object by placing the strap over the top of the head.