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"Roger Long" wrote in
: Anchoring, being one of those things best done slowly and delibertly, is one of the easiest single handed maneuvers. When I read posts about how to avoid rushing around and minimizing risk it makes me think the issue is one of the overall approach to single handing and vessel management and not of dealing with ground tackle. Getting the anchor up under sail in a tight anchorage is a bit more difficult but not much. This is one of those things that's easier said than done. If you're in a benign situation, then yes, it is easy. If you've got 20+ kts of wind and other boats anchored too close, then it would be a huge challenge. What happens if you drop the hook and it doesn't grab and you're being blown onto another boat or a reef? In non-single-handed anchoring you'd have one person at the wheel driving forward as the other person hauls the anchor in. For a single handed operation I don't know the answer to this, but it sure doesn't look like a good situation. It can be tense enough with 2 people let alone 1. I've seen this happen and I've jumped in my dinghy and offered to lend a hand. Single handed operation is inherently more risky and that's especially true when anchoring around other boats where mistakes can cause harm to others. -- Geoff |
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