Unusual anchoring method.

Rabbie

Well-Known Member
Joined
4 Jun 2001
Messages
3,895
Location
East Sussex
Visit site
I found this photo of the old Eagle and was puzzled by the twisted and chafing anchor chain(s). Presumably she had to do a 360 to get them like that. Can anyone confirm that it was common or why both bow anchors may have been deployed?. Doesn't look very Navy-like.

Eagle209.jpg
 
Looks more like a mooring bridle, after all the port anchor is shown stowed. Still, those were the days we still had proper warships...
 
It's utterly commonplace on vessels lying to two anchors, and is a consequence of swinging with the tide. It is called a 'fouled hawse'.

Ships of the line from time immemorial had this problem, and the related problems of sorting it all out when they had to put to sea suddenly and unexpectedly - as when stormy weather turned up, or enemy warships come over the horizon.....

I understand that French and Spanish ships were quite lazy about keeping a 'clear hawse' during the Napoleonic era, and RN ships were quite good at sending a boat in on a moonless night on a 'recce', then bringing the man-o-war in at dawn - catching them napping...

Here's a scan from one of my favourite books, 'Seamanship in the Age of Sail' by John Harland.....

hawse.jpg



/forums/images/graemlins/smirk.gif


Oh, I like that idea.
 
Thanks for the pic... it brings back memories.
The first time I saw Eagle she was steaming up the Johore straits to the Singapore naval base. I was in a T-bolt open dinghy out of Seletar Yacht Club.
The only time I was on board was after she was towed into Cairnryan to be broken up.
 
A swivel!?
This is obviously unintentional and the result of the ship swinging in the same direction through 540 or 720 degrees whilst moored to two anchors. They probably used a tug, made fast aft, to reverse the process and take the turns out of the anchor cables. The only other way of undoing the knitting would be to break one of the cables at a joining link and hang it off on a wire passed round the other cable in reverse order. Either way, a couple of hour's work, at least.
 
Top