oldbilbo
...
So, Vyv Cox, tell us about the length of floaty line visible in your #20 above.....
So, Vyv Cox, tell us about the length of floaty line visible in your #20 above.....
That one isn't mine but I have a similar one. You can see it, with a fishing float on the end, in this pic.
I dont recomend a fishing float, it knocks on the side of the hull at turn of tide and wakes you up!
I use a small sausage fender with a pollyprop pickup loop spliced into the 'other' end. It's marked with an anchor, skull and X bones.
I dont recomend a fishing float, it knocks on the side of the hull at turn of tide and wakes you up!
I use a small sausage fender with a pollyprop pickup loop spliced into the 'other' end. It's marked with an anchor, skull and X bones.
Why not simply tie the line to the chain?
Can you expand on why it was useful to have the 1m line and orange float on the anchor. Was it stuck so that you needed to pull it out with a hook around the roll-bar?
Why not just sink a line , it won't get trapped on passing boats , no one will steel the fender or buoy , and if you have to use it to trip the anchor , it ready on the bow . If you are worred about the it getting twisted around the chain , it not a problem to untangle it as you lift the anchor .
Oh and by the way , it best to attach a tripping line to the front of the anchor if you are planning to use it to trip the anchor and not the bar on top
BluewatersailorCroatia.webs.com
Given that the Delta is excellent in other conditions, why not get something like a fortress or a danforth to complement it?
Not sure I would want to rely on either of those resetting themselves unattended. Fantastic when set (I believe ) but if they broke free in a changing wind they may just skip across the bottom.
So can all sorts of other anchors. Surely that's why the anchor watch is necessary? If you want "tie up and leave" surely what you really should be looking at is a mooring?
You do that VYV . Maybe some of us can't swim down 8 or 10 mts and still have the energy to. Release an anchor .
I am very surprise with you views on tripping lines , and the reason you out line for not using one when need be , as a rule your posting make a lot of sense , maybe you just having a off day .![]()
Sometimes a tripping line can be useful, not for the purpose of tripping the anchor but just to show later arrivals where our anchor is.
A tripping line is a solution to a problem that doesn't exist. In ten years in the Med I have only once needed to dive on the anchor to free it, which I accomplished with no problem whatsoever.
If you would like to look at the photo again you will see that the line is attached to the crown of the anchor but it runs through the hoop instead of in front of it. no importance at all.
Read it don't understand your point .See post #27. Exactly my experience. They are not worth the trouble.
Yes, my mistake, it is an anchor buoy. Having thought more about it, I first read about the idea here and then a few months later I was posting on a thread on an American cruising forum and mentioned it, loads of the posters there were very excited about it, some wildly soI think you are describing an anchor buoy, not a tripping line. There is one exactly as yours in the letters page of the latest PBO. It is a tripping line that I have negative feelings about, a separate line running from the crown of the anchor back to the boat. Tedious to launch and recover, especially with a windlass, and in conditions where the boat moves around, e.g. light and variable winds, tideless anchorages, changes of tidal flow, etc., more nuisance than it is worth and a potential hazard.
Recently I dragged three times one night using a Delta in a fine sand/mud bay with 60m chsin in 10m. Not much wind either.
Next morning I added a Fortress on the mud setting with 5m chain attached at the Delta anchor shackle. That fixed the drag.