stevepick
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Re: Dare I say it, the \"A\" word ... Anchor advice ....
Captainslarty/LadyJessie , firstly its not the anchor manufactureres who are using terms like "drop and forget" it is enthusiastic ( possibly over enthusiastic) users. I count myself amongst the "over enthusiastic". I have very little experience ( one full season of own boat ownership) . In the 15 previous years I anchored on freinds boats in my area of sailing ( clyde /scotland west coast) the CQR was a pain to set. And I experienced one drag. my boat when purchased had a crappy , small CQR copy , so I replaced it with a ( one size up from recommended) Rocna. I then went sailing and anchoring. It would be fair to say that ( except for information gleaned from books and courses) I have no experience and a small amount of knowledge of what to do. The result of setting a rocna every time I laid it , first time , absolutely solidly as far as I could tell , does imply that the "experience" factor may be a red herring ( the sixth time I used my anchor we happily anchored in loch aline ( mud) and sat out wind continuosly over 35 knots overnight - not a dramatic test , but I was happy with it!).
Is it possible that its not such a "black art" with newer anchor designs? What is the " procedure" that you guys are talking about that ensures you anchor OK, or can I only gain that after 10 years and 100's of nights at anchor? Should anchoring be that difficult an art? Could anchors that do work better in weed and difficult surfaces like hard sand be just better things in general?
I don't have a windlass, reseting my anchor would be a complete pain in the @rse, so far I haven't had to do it.
Captainslarty/LadyJessie , firstly its not the anchor manufactureres who are using terms like "drop and forget" it is enthusiastic ( possibly over enthusiastic) users. I count myself amongst the "over enthusiastic". I have very little experience ( one full season of own boat ownership) . In the 15 previous years I anchored on freinds boats in my area of sailing ( clyde /scotland west coast) the CQR was a pain to set. And I experienced one drag. my boat when purchased had a crappy , small CQR copy , so I replaced it with a ( one size up from recommended) Rocna. I then went sailing and anchoring. It would be fair to say that ( except for information gleaned from books and courses) I have no experience and a small amount of knowledge of what to do. The result of setting a rocna every time I laid it , first time , absolutely solidly as far as I could tell , does imply that the "experience" factor may be a red herring ( the sixth time I used my anchor we happily anchored in loch aline ( mud) and sat out wind continuosly over 35 knots overnight - not a dramatic test , but I was happy with it!).
Is it possible that its not such a "black art" with newer anchor designs? What is the " procedure" that you guys are talking about that ensures you anchor OK, or can I only gain that after 10 years and 100's of nights at anchor? Should anchoring be that difficult an art? Could anchors that do work better in weed and difficult surfaces like hard sand be just better things in general?
I don't have a windlass, reseting my anchor would be a complete pain in the @rse, so far I haven't had to do it.