sarabande
Well-Known Member
"Normal" and "Heavy Duty" anchoring. Change the anchor, or another set of kit ?
I am of the persuasion that a two anchor set-up is prudent for normal sailing.
One modern, light weight, design to the boat's length and displacement for day-to-day use, and an older, heavier but proven effective design for a boat 25% longer and heavier for windy conditions.
The debate with a valued and experienced colleague is over how the bigger anchor is used. I have two choices:-
1 a "serial" setup for a quick change system using a shackle or maillon rapide and the normal anchor chain
2 a "parallel" setup, using a separate, heavier, chain to the big anchor, and stowing that below in the expectation that one can foresee when it might be needed, and then retrieve it from the stowage place.
The details of which anchors, and chain sizes, are irrelevant to the philosophical and practical challenges of the decision. A serial setup would need the normal anchor to be retrieved from the bow, and swapped with the big anchor. The parallel one needs the heavy weather anchor to be retrieved from the bilge area, and then set up on deck.
One remote risk is that of losing the normal anchor and chain through a lockup on the sea bed. This would prevent the serial deployment of the big anchor, whereas a parallel setup would mitigate the risk and yield a resilient solution.
A 'lunch hook' / kedge is also on board.
Views and comments sought to identify flaws and alternatives, please.
I am of the persuasion that a two anchor set-up is prudent for normal sailing.
One modern, light weight, design to the boat's length and displacement for day-to-day use, and an older, heavier but proven effective design for a boat 25% longer and heavier for windy conditions.
The debate with a valued and experienced colleague is over how the bigger anchor is used. I have two choices:-
1 a "serial" setup for a quick change system using a shackle or maillon rapide and the normal anchor chain
2 a "parallel" setup, using a separate, heavier, chain to the big anchor, and stowing that below in the expectation that one can foresee when it might be needed, and then retrieve it from the stowage place.
The details of which anchors, and chain sizes, are irrelevant to the philosophical and practical challenges of the decision. A serial setup would need the normal anchor to be retrieved from the bow, and swapped with the big anchor. The parallel one needs the heavy weather anchor to be retrieved from the bilge area, and then set up on deck.
One remote risk is that of losing the normal anchor and chain through a lockup on the sea bed. This would prevent the serial deployment of the big anchor, whereas a parallel setup would mitigate the risk and yield a resilient solution.
A 'lunch hook' / kedge is also on board.
Views and comments sought to identify flaws and alternatives, please.