How long is water remaining in a cylinder after drawing considered to have been willfully uprooted?
Halacha 1 states that water remaining in a cylinder is considered to have been willfully uprooted for three days. After three days, it is no longer considered willfully drawn.
Question 2
A person leads an animal to drink. Water ascends on the animal's feet. Is this considered willfully uprooted?
Halacha 3 states that water ascending on the animal's feet is not considered to have been uprooted willfully UNLESS the owner had specific intent for this to happen.
Question 3
A person is swimming on the surface of water and splashes water onto produce. Is that splashed water considered desired?
Halacha 6 states that when a person is swimming on the surface of water, the water he splashes is NOT considered as having been uprooted willfully. The water on his body, however, is considered desired.
Question 4
When a person beats a wet hide outside the water, is the expelled water considered willfully uprooted?
Halacha 9 states that if a person beats a hide outside the water, the water that is expelled is considered as having been uprooted willfully, for his desire IS that the water be expelled.
Question 5
Water falls from a shaken tree to an adjacent tree's branches, then down onto attached vegetables. Is this water considered desired on the vegetables?
Halacha 15 states that when water falls from a shaken tree to another tree's branches and then to plants or vegetables, the water on those plants is NOT considered as having been uprooted willfully.