If you're not in a designated anchorage perhaps? Even then, I'm not sure it
would apply. Perhaps they don't know the rules. Who are the "authorities"?
CG, Sheriff?
--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com
"Ellen MacArthur" wrote in message
reenews.net...
"katy" wrote
| Who cares which one is right? If you're anchored, show an anchor light
| for Pete's sake, no matter where you are...getting hit in the middle of
| the night by some yumyum not paying attention isn't a place anyone would
| want to be...all this quibbling about the interpretations just leads to
| overthinking the common sense application for what we a
| cruiser/racers...yes, it is important if you are out in commercial
| waters to know what needs to ve known, but what you're addressing here
| is pure semantic haggling....
Sorry, but I should've explained things better. This isn't about being
aboard a boat anchored out. It's about a 17 foot sailboat with no motor
anchored on a mooring. In a harbor away from traffic. It's used only for
day sailing. Nobody lives in it. It doesn't have a battery. It's never
had
an anchor light. All of a sudden the authorities say it must have an
anchor
light. I don't think they even know why. I'd like to know why.
Do all the boats in harbors on anchors under 7 meters in your area
have
anchor lights? I think the 7 meter rule was made just for such little
boats.
How can you expect a little boat with no battery and nobody home to turn
on an anchor light every night? It's not even reasonable.
Cheers,
Ellen