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On 2007-10-31 10:46:40 -0400, Skip Gundlach said:
Do you bend on each anchor before launch, or do you set one for the area you already know, and leave it attached? And, if like in the Chessie, what do you do when the bottom conditions change repeatedly (the alluvial area was where we were lots, but the last couple of hooks has been hard, and from what I could see, the intervening ones were sand, e.g.) We always have the "general purpose" anchor -- for the area -- bent on for instant deployment. Some times, some anchor must go down *now*. If we could mount two at the same time, the other would be quite a bit different and also ready to drop if the first was insufficient. The standard configuration used to be a plow and a claw, but there are better anchors than both these days. One thing that maximizes success is to get *IN* to the anchorage early and test unfamiliar ones with a hand set, letting it set a bit by itself, then a moderate back-down. Rushing the set is a bad idea. Most protected Bay anchorages have a lovely mud bottom, but we have moved a couple of times when we found a bottom we couldn't get a good grip on. 50' can make the difference. -- Jere Lull Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD Xan's pages: http://web.mac.com/jerelull/iWeb/Xan/ Our BVI trips & tips: http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
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