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land anchor vs fluke anchor for anchors set directly on beach
My boat was on land all winter and it didn't move an inch even
without an anchor
Doug
s/v Callista
"John H" wrote in message
news 
On 26 May 2004 10:24:14 -0700, (Laura) wrote:
We have a 200 Sea Ray Sundeck (deckboat/bowrider). I have a fluke
anchor. We are new to boating.
My question is whether or not a "land anchor" is useful or will the
fluke anchor work just as well for setting the anchor right on the
beach?
I have found two types of beach anchors 1) Ironwood Pacific Land
Anchor for around $40. This is a helix design and is 22" long (see
http://www.ironwoodpacific.com/products/landanchor.asp) and 2) "beach
spike" length ?. This is more of a straight spike design, so you just
drive it straight down. (sold by www.skilimited.com).
I assume a land anchor is a little bit easier to use? But then again,
if a fluke anchor works just fine when in the water, wouldn't a fluke
anchor be just fine when on dry land? I am a bit concerned about
having too much gear on the boat. I also only have one anchor, so
maybe having a land anchor as a backup would be a good idea?
I carry a Danforth on the bow for water anchoring, and a very small
Danforth for
beach anchoring. When at a beach, I'm usually using both anchors, one off
the
bow, the other off the stern.
Works great!
John H
On the 'Poco Loco' out of Deale, MD
on the beautiful Chesapeake Bay!
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