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#30
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Peter Hendra wrote: Skip, May I make a couple of points. 1. You said that you had a sea anchor and would have used it had it been more readily available. When crossing an ocean or when uncertain weather is imminent, it may be a good idea to have the sea anchor ready for deployment on deck. It is not onerous and will give you confidence to face any weather. I have a short length of stout nylon line with a eye splice on each end - with galvanised thimbles. One end drops over the bollard on the mid-foredeck (bronze maltese cross). The other is shackled to a short length of half inch galvanised chain which passes over the anchor roller preventing chafe to any line (one of the main problems of a sea-anchor). One does not have to crawl up the deck in a stong wind and crashing seas in the dark to "move the line a little". From the chain to the cockpit, outside the staunchions and secured at intervals with plastic cable ties, I have an 18 mm three strand nylon rode with an eye at each end. The sea anchor plus the zipped bag with the 120 metres of nylon braid are secured to the aft deck. Both ends of the braid are available when I open the bag and I shackle these (two bow shackles to each eye splice for added security) to both the rode along side the boat and to the para anchor.l When I decide to deploy, all I do is lie the vessel about 20 degrees off the wind and waves, throw out the retrieval line after clipping on a large round fender as a float, and when it has fed out by the boat's backward drift, I feed out the para anchor. It all happens in surprising slow motion and i'm sitting down, safely in the cockpit the entire time. The anchor pulls the nylon braid out of its bag and then, when that it out, it pulls on the line to the bow, snapping the cable ties one after another. There is nothing greater than being bounced around crashing up and down through the seas and heading into bad weather, than suddenly lying stable with the bow rising up and down with each on-coming wave. It's just like parking your car in a busy freeway on a long journey and taking a break. This sounds like a great system for stowing and deploying the sea para-anchor. This is the first time I've heard of this way of doing it, but it makes good sense to me. I'm going to save your post for when I get ready to rig my (yet to be acquired) sea anchor. Don W. |
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