Robin
Well-Known Member
Ours is a Delta and it sits in the bow roller because that is where I want it to be. It is heavy and awkward to lift inboard through the pulpit legs and past the roller headsail gear and in any case it still is within the overhang of the pulpit. If we removed the anchor our twin bow rollers look like a shotgun barrel and still stick out enough to do damage. We once saw a small Etap T-bone a boast in a berth opposite us and hole it very effectively with his bow roller and no anchor.
I'm thinking too of adding one on the stern, not because we anchor often fore/aft but as a kind of cattle prodder to keep our dinghy members off the transom as they short tack out of the marina en masse when the tide is too low to use their normal route. A whole fleet of short tacking Dart Cats is fearsome to behold and even more so when the RS400s, and the rest of the monohulls are going straight through them since the cats don't tack upwind very well at all.
IMHO those who propose lifting the anchor inboard and stowing it elsewhere probably have smaller boats with small anchors and don't anchor very often, I can assure you in this case size does matter.
I'm thinking too of adding one on the stern, not because we anchor often fore/aft but as a kind of cattle prodder to keep our dinghy members off the transom as they short tack out of the marina en masse when the tide is too low to use their normal route. A whole fleet of short tacking Dart Cats is fearsome to behold and even more so when the RS400s, and the rest of the monohulls are going straight through them since the cats don't tack upwind very well at all.
IMHO those who propose lifting the anchor inboard and stowing it elsewhere probably have smaller boats with small anchors and don't anchor very often, I can assure you in this case size does matter.