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Jonathan Ganz
 
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Default anchoring techniques

We usually politely ask them to leave and pick another spot.
No one has yet refused. Of course, we had one situation where
we didn't want them to move... We were in Belize on a cat,
when a 30 foot mono decided to anchor really close. I got
ready to give my speech about how there's a great place on
the other side of the lagoon, then I realized there were four
women on the boat. The raft up was nice.

"Jeff Morris" jeffmo@NoSpam-sv-lokiDOTcom wrote in message
...

"DSK" wrote in message

...

I read Jeff's post with interest, and I respectfully disagree.
Setting 2 anchors is a major PITA and offers no holding
advantage over a bigger single anchor. It does limit swing room,
and that's important sometimes.


I used to think two anchors is a PITA, but the Fortress is so light it can

be managed
easily. I've only had badly tangled rodes once, and even then it was

sorted out in 15
minutes.

The problem I have with the "one large anchor" approach is that you have

to then use a
primary that's not just one level oversized, but two or three. Much of

the time that I
double anchor the decision is made after the fact, when the wind turns out

stronger that
expected, or the holding ground is softer. My 35# Delta is good for 95%

of my anchoring,
adding the Fortress allows me the sleep in otherwise marginal conditions.

I probably use
it about 5-10% of the time.

Also, I'm convinced that two anchors offers much more security than one

large, especially
when the two are different styles. I've never dragged an inch with two

anchors, nor have
I heard of any such problem except in extreme conditions. And when the

"big one" comes,
I'll be pulling out a third.

Of course, having a lightweight catamaran, I'm not eager to oversize my

ground tackle.
But I've also become convinced that the most important overlooked factor

is anchoring is
that the gear should be light enough that you don't hesitate to haul and

re-deploy if the
first set does not work out as expected. Maybe a third of the time we

decide it didn't
work out right - either we dragged a bit, the conditions changed, or maybe

someone
squeezed in where I didn't think was appropriate. Having relatively light

gear, I just
haul it and reset.

snip

I've been surprised at how few people really put any effort into
anchoring, or who put a lot of effort into the wrong (IMHO)
thing. For example, on the advice of people like Skipper Bob a
lot of people are setting two anchors, but using little or no
chain, anchoring in stupid places, and not bothering to take
bearings or transits.


My pet peeve is the "herd instinct" where people see three boats on the

west side of an
anchorage, figure that must be where the good holding is, and drop their

anchor right in
the middle. This leads to the conversation: "Do you think I'm too close?"

he says from
about 5 feet away. "Maybe just a bit" I say, trying to be polite. "Well,

don't worry,
You'll swing, I'll swing, it'll work out. Have a beer, don't worry."

"Yeh, right," I
mumble, as I try to look like an axe murderer to his wife. "Honey, isn't

that Ralphie's
Carver over on the other side? Maybe we should check it out?" his wife

says. Thank God!
[true story]