Bobc
Well-Known Member
Read my post again.I have sat and watched people lose swim suits, towels (and even some folding chairs) not to mention beer cans in anchorages. More often than not the offending articles are never retrieved. We have heard of people catching crab pots and supermarket trolleys - and we once caught a 5kg gas cylinder.
If you anchor catches any of these items your anchor will not set - if you simply chuck the anchor over the side in relatively calm conditions you will not know it is fouled unless you try it. You can wait for the wind to pick up, but that might not happen till 2am. It does seem ever so simple to put the line in reverse.
Modern anchor can have a sharp toe - sharp enough to catch more natural items, seaweed or a shell - again - instead of waiting for the wind to pick up - reverse is so much predictable.
These anchors might 'set' but will never offer reliable hold as they simply cannot set deeply - how are you going to find out - unless you test them to near maximum of your yacht's ability to check the hold? Both of these anchors are under the bridge deck of two different catamarans, a common location for the bow roller. You cannot easily see that the anchors have been fouled.
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"...once the anchor has grabbed and set, I've never had it drag using this method.
There is absolutely no need to use reverse other than maybe in tick-over to help it get a grip in light wind conditions."
If there is no tide and little or no wind, then of course you have to use reverse to set the anchor.
I think maybe the difference here is that your experience is in Australia, and mine is predominantly in the UK/France.