jordanbasset
Well-Known Member
If you have a remote anchor control it is not that much more difficult than if there are two of you. Sort out the anchor so it is ready to drop, make sure all your stern lines are ready to deploy. Check out where you are going into, normally people about so ask them if they wouldn't mind taking your lines. Then reverse as normal, letting the anchor down and be ready to pass the stern lines to the person waiting there.Out of interest, how would you do a "Med moor" if single handed? I can't imagine how you'd do it, as you need to be at both ends of the boat at once. You need someone on the bow to drop the anchor and let out chain, and then someone on the stern to get the shore lines on. In anything of a current or wind, you need someone on the helm; on a boat that responds poorly in reverse like mine, you need someone on the helm in any situation. I can just about imagine doing it two-up - one on the helm, the other dropping the anchor and then coming to the stern to handle lines - but I can't visualize a way to do it single handed.
If I ever go to the Mediterranean, I think I'd better anchor off!
Would be more difficult if you had a centre cockpit boat I would assume!
