Racing anchors - by popular request

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It has long been 'the ordinary practice of seamen' of the ORC/RORC type to carry the smallest, lightest, cheapest, anchor-tackle that they could conceivably get away with during the 'only when two blue moons are in the sky' Scrutineering season. Indeed, it has also been considered sporting for teensy-weensy anchors to be passed by dinghy or 'cross-decking' from Inspected Boat to Uninspected Boat, for the pleasure of seeing mounting surprise, consternation, then apoplexy on the faces of worthy Race Scrutineers in hallowed havens such as QAB and Cowes Marinas. The French and the Dutch do not understand this form of humour.

Nowhere is this sport so avidly pursued as in the arcane world of multihull racing, although it is true to say that this has led to something of an 'ever-closer union' with the RNLI service. It is now considered by some to be faintly 'unsporting' for a racing multihull to carry an effective anchor - in the traditional sense - as that is seen to put other competitors at a disadvantage when it comes to kedging ( note - an ancient racing tactic of the 1930s-1990s, of staying stopped while other competitors sail backwards )

( Example from a recent Fastnet Race report - "....as the tide turned foul, down went our kedge anchor - in 225 feet of water. That’s got to be a record! This old racing tactic of deep-water kedging was used successfully in the ‘30s by RORC legend Adlard Coles in ‘Cohoe’ and has largely been forgotten - but not by crafty and well-prepared crews! Before long, ‘Molly’ and some others re-appeared, with bare steerage way, sailing past us again – backwards - into the gathering murk...." )

On another occasion, at the Start of a Scottish Islands Peaks Race in Oban Harbour, vessels were required to 'anchor' close inshore while awaiting their running teams. The bottom close-in is notoriously foul, and there is a history of yachts remaining anchor-fouled for hours and hours.... One sneaky little trimaran made up a bag or 'purse' of old fishing netting cadged from the quay, which the crew filled with big stones from the beach, and lowered that to the seabed in scant depth. There was neither wind nor tide strong enough to dislodge the boat, and when the time came, the crew slipped their doubled warp from the bag of stones and sailed smartly off, to the outrage and chagrin of their 'be-hooked' fellow-competitors. This essentially-Scottish technique is locally called 'cadging'...../forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

The question for good forumeers is...


What's the most outlandish - but effective - anchoring technique you have seen used?

/forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
You don't need an anchor to remain attaqched to the sea bed. I didn't race, but when I sailed up on the East coast (Blackwater river) for a year, the usual method was to carefully and accurately deploy the foot of the keel into a mudbank. The suggestion that I ran aground every time I went out is an outrageous slur. /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif
 
I met a bloke at Azores who on the way from Senegal found a seamountain at 70 meters depth and when it was dead calm he anchored there and stayed overnight in the middle of the ocean. /forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif
 
There's one that has been measured at 20m. I can't remember the name off the top of me head, but it has woken up a few watchkeepers before now. They are all generally in the same region as the Canaries and Cape Verde islands.
 
Whilst racing an Enterprise on the Thames at Hammersmith. Wind a non-existant easterly and a big spring tide. No way could our feeble little grapnel keep hold of bottom. Worked a treat when thrown into the branches of the bankside trees.

In another race, managed to foul my arch rival's anchor with my own. His line was quickly retrieved, and anchor stolen. Awful bad language as he dissapeard in the direction of Barnes.
 
We had a weensy anchor in a flat calm Wednesday night race when the tide turned. So we dug it out, attached a bit of spare warp and lobbed it over, and let it pay out and take in so we could judge when we were sailing forward, and just lift it clear. None of your 3:1 all chain 'ere mate.
We had been successful at this, and managed to go from 5th to 1st. Hurrah. The wind filled in a bit and so we decided to hoist it and away to victory.
It stuck fast, and we went to 3rd or 4th while trying to dislodge it. I tied the only fender to the bit of warp and lobbed the plot overboard.

We came back after the race to recover it, and ended raising a ships anchor over 150kg, which we slowly towed into the marina berth. We tied it off on the end cleat of the pontoon, and let it go, and the sudden release nearly had the mast swinging into the next boat along.
Rich Owner phoned marina ans said theree was a free anchor off the pontoon end if they wanted it.
Came back at the weekend, and it had gone. Funnily enough no one spoke to us later about it from the work boat crew.
 
[ QUOTE ]
'anchoring' close to the EC1 buoy.........by means of a long loop of line and very little anchor.

[/ QUOTE ]

done that too, took 20 mins to get it back up when wind shifted.
 
Round the Mull of Kintyre Race (Clyde Cruising Club) mates of mine snuck in towards the shore as the wind dropped and the tide turned.
~sails down sail cover on all got 4 hours sleep, woke up, full fry up breakfast, raised the sails, finally sailed off the anchor and got the north going tide.
competitors by this time were away down the Irish sea, knackered, frustrated and tired.
 
We anchored in the Canal du Midi. The edges near the banks were very shallow and we couldn't get ashore. Had about half an hour to wait for the lock-keeper's lunch time to finish, nothing to get alongside. Wind was straight down the canal, ideal for anchoring.
 
Did the Skaw race back in the early 70s, and went on the owner's family holiday afterwards around the Lysekil archipelago. Up one of the fjords, across the natural route towards the harbour, there's a great big concrete wall about 1 fathom below the surface - designed in the war to stop midget submarines, I believe.

We didn't know about this, for some basic reason such as not looking at the chart, and found ourselves suddenly six inches higher out the water as the boat rode gently up on top of the wall. Towed off by the local engineer who said "we call it our visitors' anchor place, as we always see them stopping there."

Wonderful, wonderful place; must add it to my list for another retirement cruise !
 
Class racing in an OOD34 at Cowes Week. Light and shifty conditions. Approaching a downtide turning mark, surrounded by anchored Class1 boats that couldn't sail away from the buoy over the tide. So we knew we couldn't. As we approached we got the kedge ready, and heaved it over to stop us a few feet short of the mark.

Discreet cough and a stage whisper from a mate on a bigger boat, close by, along the lines of "Oi, you burkes, your class has got a shorten course here and the committee boat's just over there". So we let a few more metres of warp go to drop back past the buoy, and got the gun.

First place while anchored. Gotta be a record, innit?
 
Island in northern Tonga on a 40fter.
Bow anchored in 33mts and stepped off the stern onto land just getting the knees wet.
Quite spooky really.
 
Naughty, naughty... both you and the boat which slipped thebag of stones should have been dsq'd, supposed to finish with all the kit you started with - so you should give that big silver cup back!! /forums/images/graemlins/tongue.gif
 
Re: Racing anchors - yawn . . .

It must be an indictment of the average Solent yottie, particularly those who enter the Round the Island Race, that when we saw the Needles going forwards we lowered the kedge - and immediately broke away from a mass of intertwined boats. It was ages before the rattle of another anchor chain was heard, then eventually another, then another, and still the raft of competitors backed towards Yarmouth. In fact many retired and got home early enough to vent their spleen in these columns!

We finished, they didn't.
 
Re: Racing anchors - yawn . . .

I anchored once in a bristol channel TV race (first place won a colour tv.).As the anchor bit we pulled away to the front of the fleet and put the kettle on .caught off guard by the wind filling in again they all drew level with us again by the time we got the anchor up from 100 feet. Can't win them all /forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif
 
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