Bouba
Well-Known Member
I’ve tried three times to divert the thread to anchors but it’s holding firm
That's just a fluke.I’ve tried three times to divert the thread to anchors but it’s holding firm
You're certainly putting in the spade work, but I fear that you are ploughing a lone furrow. Even with the power of a sixth Dan, fourth generation anchors should do the trick, unless caught between a rock'n'a hard place, as Neeves' friend Bruce could tell you. Only a madman (like Charles Manson) could disagree, if he wasn't saying "Boo, gel" to frighten his female victims. Still, keep your hair on, for tresses are hard to grow if they have been clawed out, and seek your fortune elsewhere. I have poor old Britany Spears (she was dealt a rough hand) on the radio and her voice sounds rough. Perhaps she should have a Fisherman's Friend? {cont p94]I’ve tried three times to divert the thread to anchors but it’s holding firm
Yes, FAITH !am I missing anything else that may help?
... 4. Small nightcap ...
With nearly 50 posts in a few hours, I think the conclusion is that anchoring is over thought. With that comes anxiety and the resultant inability to sleep.
KISS works well. We select where we are going to drop, check the depths around, drop, settle, set with some reverse, check transits and finish with G&T's. Once happy, electronics off and no alarms. All the modern gadgetry on a boat has the same effect of smart phones where you feel the need to check it every few minutes. In the old days (pre GPS) it was simple and people worried less.
So, stop over thinking and enjoy the scenery.
The problem is that the OP is younger than us. Maybe nobody should anchor overnight until their prostate enlarges.I just wish I could sleep for 3 or 4 hours without having to get up for a piss!
Have a compass course written down that will take you clear of hazards into deeper water.
Jot down 2 or 3 transits or bearings, bearing in mind you probably won't be able to see them when the sun goes down.
Set an anchor watch on your phone, tablet or plotter.
In a similar vein, set a geofence on your plotter so that if you cross it an alarm sounds.
Set shallow and deep alarms on your echo sounder.
Set an alarm to wake you at the turn of the tide.
Drink some cocoa with a shot of rum in it before turning in.
And most important of all. Don't forget to cancel all these alarms before setting off in the morning!
and don’t forget the black ballFor the last 51 years I have dropped the anchor and gone to sleep, having done one thing that nobody has mentioned on this thread.
I have never bothered with anchor alarms, because they didn’t exist in 1970, and I have never bothered with “setting” the anchor because my first two boats didn’t have engines and the third and fourth ones had engines that were hardly worth trying to start. Besides, it’s just nicer to bring up and get under way quietly, under sail.
I have never dragged an anchor whilst asleep.
The thing that nobody has mentioned and which I think is quite important is ...
...hoist a riding light...
I say “hoist” because I deplore people who use an all round white at the masthead. YMMV.
I deplore people who use an all round white at the masthead. YMMV.
Ok, I'll bite: why do you deplore us? I'm currently behaving deplorably in Falmouth Harbour, Antigua with about 50 fellow deplorables.