Robin
Well-Known Member
There I have corrected that for you.![]()
Just as my anchor is much bigger than yours, so is my legal team.
There I have corrected that for you.![]()
2 of my 5 live on the bow roller
Most of the boats here on the East Coast actually drop their hook on about 2% of their outings, the rest of the time marina hopping or daysailing from-to their home port.
...leaving it tipped on the roller...
The proper term for which is 'anchor a'cock Bill'. As in the order is given to 'Make the anchor a'cock Bill'. When it has been made so, the confirmation from the bow would confirm, 'Anchor a'cock Bill.'
Seriously!
How lazy to leave an anchor overhanging the bow 'Just in case', as most yachts carry their anchor forward, is it not a matter of going forward to deploy it ?
the additional 15 seconds to get the anchor from the foredeck and over the bow roller is unlikely to make any real difference to the outcome of an engine failure etc.
Carrying an anchor overhanging the bows which in the majority of cases is never used anyway is pointless, dangerous and generally rude. Most of the boats here on the East Coast actually drop their hook on about 2% of their outings, the rest of the time marina hopping or daysailing from-to their home port.
As a racing sailor I have been on the receiving end of a ' Just in case' bow hung anchor that has only been used TWICE in the current clumsy owners five years of use !
Luckily the damage received was fairly minor but strong words were certainly exchanged...
Keep it on deck or in the anchor locker where it will not bother anyone else.
Dangerous & rude?
How on earth did you get there?
2 of my 5 live on the bow roller, never overhang a pontoon and would look awful and pointless lying around on the deck. No where else to put them. Takes about a second to deploy single handed without leaving the cockpit with a wireless remote.
But dangerous and rude? Strange comment.
if it were good practice ,the racing rules would no doubt be altered to ensure anchors as 'Ready to deploy.
'
Obviously I disagree with your position on anchors as to me it sounds like somebody saying, "How rude to leave the bumpers and wing mirrors on your car when you are not driving it, instead of taking the 15 seconds needed to dismantle them and put them in the boot"
Clearly, you miss the point on purpose, hardly a case of saying ' Remove the bowsprit and pulpit' But simply pointing out that poorly berthed vessels overhanging the pontoon from both sides,with large lumps of unused iron projecting across a walkway, is in fact an indication of ignorance or, "Rudeness". Mooring cleats on pontoons are normally within 6-9" of the edge and avoiding them is part of yachting. Being obliged, by thoughtless and lazy boat handling, to duck around anchors and bowsprits is on the other hand entirely avoidable.
As to racing rules, The reason anchors are banned from being left to project beyond the stemhead is simple, It is dangerous and can be avoided without cost or indeed any great amount of effort.
Good luck to you in your sailing and I truly hope you never need to find out what happens when a large anchor drives itself into your topsides.
Ours lives in it's locker when it's not being used.
The one time I lost drive from the engine, after hitting a bit of wood on the river Trieux, I was able to launch it in no time at all.
Obviously I disagree with your position on anchors as to me it sounds like somebody saying, "How rude to leave the bumpers and wing mirrors on your car when you are not driving it, instead of taking the 15 seconds needed to dismantle them and put them in the boot"
Clearly, you miss the point on purpose, hardly a case of saying ' Remove the bowsprit and pulpit' But simply pointing out that poorly berthed vessels overhanging the pontoon from both sides,with large lumps of unused iron projecting across a walkway, is in fact an indication of ignorance or, "Rudeness". Mooring cleats on pontoons are normally within 6-9" of the edge and avoiding them is part of yachting. Being obliged, by thoughtless and lazy boat handling, to duck around anchors and bowsprits is on the other hand entirely avoidable.
As to racing rules, The reason anchors are banned from being left to project beyond the stemhead is simple, It is dangerous and can be avoided without cost or indeed any great amount of effort.
Good luck to you in your sailing and I truly hope you never need to find out what happens when a large anchor drives itself into your topsides.
This is cure the symptom not cure the problem syndrome.
I have no argument at all that it is rude and inconsiderate to have overhanging bits in a marina berth such as to make it difficult for others to pass by, it is unnecessary. The same applies to careless lead of power cables and to 'stuff' left on pontoons, even all the spare sails and gear left there by raceboats lightening ship for the day's race round the cans.
The argument that anchors should be removed to prevent greater damage in a collision is different, the solution is to prevent the collision in the first instance. Racing is a different case and raceboats expect to be in constant near miss situations, hence in some cases rules exist to remove anchors, fine no worries go ahead.
The argument that a bow anchor on a stern to parked boat can cause damage when another boat cocks up getting into an adjacent berth is again placing the blame on the innocent rather than on the incompetent new arrival.
As I said and did others, size matters. On a larger cruising boat the anchors unsurprisingly are going to be larger too, so inevitably making them difficult in the extreme to lift and feed through the pulpit to stow somewhere else unspecified, not every boat having an anchor locker anyway, never mind any need to unshackle a wired connection to the chain.
This is cure the symptom not cure the problem syndrome.
I have no argument at all that it is rude and inconsiderate to have overhanging bits in a marina berth such as to make it difficult for others to pass by, it is unnecessary. The same applies to careless lead of power cables and to 'stuff' left on pontoons, even all the spare sails and gear left there by raceboats lightening ship for the day's race round the cans.
The argument that anchors should be removed to prevent greater damage in a collision is different, the solution is to prevent the collision in the first instance. Racing is a different case and raceboats expect to be in constant near miss situations, hence in some cases rules exist to remove anchors, fine no worries go ahead.
The argument that a bow anchor on a stern to parked boat can cause damage when another boat cocks up getting into an adjacent berth is again placing the blame on the innocent rather than on the incompetent new arrival.
As I said and did others, size matters. On a larger cruising boat the anchors unsurprisingly are going to be larger too, so inevitably making them difficult in the extreme to lift and feed through the pulpit to stow somewhere else unspecified, not every boat having an anchor locker anyway, never mind any need to unshackle a wired connection to the chain.
+ 1, though I might argue with the term 'Parking' a boat; it seems to be increasingly used and I'm guilty of it myself, but I thought I was being tongue in cheek !
A large family cruiser is going to have trouble stowing a heavy anchor centrally, which is why I pondered about designing in handling systems, but for most of us having the anchor ready to deploy quickly is the major consideration.
Talking of consideration, one should think of others and not berth with large bits of ironmongery overhanging pontoons, maybe a relevant metaphor to think of would be someone with an oxy-acetylene torch removing any item in the way...
Not actually over the top for a cruising boat kitted out for places where you are completly on your own,no marinas, no one to come and help you.Ok, obviously if you feel the need to carry FIVE anchors you may have to have the odd few hanging dangerously and rudely off the bow, but for most normal yotties a single bower anchor and a kedge are sufficient for all their needs !
Quite ironic, you complaing about rudeness then being rude yourself.Doubtless were you to be involved in a collision your armour plating would save your vessel and you could perhaps deploy the remaining anchors as hard points along the topsides in the style of a chieftain tank.
You should be whinging about people not mooring boats properly.Working one's way along a pontoon festooned with overhanging anchors is possibly pleasurable to some but I for one have no masochistic desire to remove lumps of flesh on thoughtlessly positioned hardware.
So, Dangerous yes, Rude, yes because many people dislike overhanging anchors on pontoons and finally, if it were good practice ,the racing rules would no doubt be altered to ensure anchors as 'Ready to deploy.
Go on - tell us how many metres of chain you have for that lot. 200? 300?