Dockhead
Well-Known Member
I don't need to read about williwaws, because I've had enough of my own painful experiences with katabatic winds. My worst night ever at anchor was on a charter boat in Croatia, decades ago, in Hvar harbour, when a storm hit bringing bombs of wind down out of the mountains. Not a single anchor on a single boat in the ancient harbor held that night -- it was madness. And no chart plotters, and zero visibility. It's a miracle I didn't go onto the rocks, or collide with another boat.You have covered a yacht that has a natural propensity to veer but veering can occur in an anchorage where in strong winds the wind is fuelled dow valleys, through gaps in the trees. Read people's experiences in, say, Skye and they will talk of williwaws - bullets of winds from varying directiona.
Adding a ride sail will only make the effects worse.
Shore lines come to mind
Jonathan
I've also experienced them in Norwegian fjords, and in Greenland.
We weren't talking about katabatic winds, which is a completely different problem from veering at anchor in an ordinary gradient wind. I disagree that a riding sail makes it worse -- in fact that was what I settled on as the best solution for katabatic winds. You get hit from different directions, and in bursts, and if the boat lies stably head to the wind, you minimize the forces on the boat, and on the ground tackle. If the boat veers off, you present a lot more area to the wind, and I've seen boats even knocked down or nearly knocked down, under bare poles. You really want to prevent this.
Shore ties are the choice of most Arctic sailors -- you can see the big drums of green polypropylene on the foredecks of proper expedition boats. I took appropriate ropes for shore ties to Greenland with me, but never used them. Katabatic winds come from different directions, and a shore tie holds the boat in a specific direction, irrespective of the wind direction. It would be awful to be held broadside to a wind burst. But Arctic sailors don't use shore ties for that purpose -- they use them in order to anchor in steeply sloping bottoms typical in mountainous parts of the Arctic. To keep the boat aligned to pull on the anchor uphill.
I didn't like that because of the risk of getting hit broadside by a wind burst. Then all your calculation of pulling the anchor uphill is out the window. I don't like anchoring on sloping bottoms, full stop.
So my technique was different -- I looked for coves where it was possible to anchor in the very middle, in the deepest part. That way the anchor can't be pulled off downhill. Inspired by Dashew's technique in Antarctica, I would do this even on very short scope, in very deep water. With a riding sail to keep the boat head to wind. It worked great.
