dgadee
Well-Known Member
Good stuff. Personal stuff and anchors seem to go together! We need more science - what does Trump have to say on the subject?
Jonathan, you might be using a light weight anchor, short light chain plus rope, but those other "long term cruisers" are using yachts in the 10-20 tonne range not 7 like yours. Therefore yes they do have 80m of chain and 30+ kgs of anchor. After all I could say "OMG" why are these 7T catamaran sailors so big an anchor compared to mine.
Now if you want me to take you seriously, I need to see some evidence of this please. From what I have seen of the anchor tests over the years, NG anchors have all bettered the Delta, one of the reasons we switched from Delta to Rocna a decade ago. Same weight higher holding power.
If the yacht is your home, what's the problem in ensuring that your anchor is the best you can have?
The latest thread on CF was about a detailed study showing that weight in the chain has little benefit once the wind gets up, instead putting the weight into the anchor achieves much better holding. After all you did just this with short piece of light weight chain and rely on the holding power of the anchor.
The Mantus isn't a well known in the UK, old CQRs continue to rule the roost. Your attacks on one make of anchor is wearing a little thin. If you haven't used it extensively, then I will just dismiss your posts as irrelevant with no personal experience. If you buy one and anchored with it for 300 nights, then come back with photos saying it doesn't work, well that would be more believable. Hey you might even like it and keep it as the main. After all 30kgs on your 7T yacht is really noticeable is it, particularly if you have hardly any chain. You're down under aren't you? ye gods you probably have more weight in Lager on board.
At the end of the day, a choice and competition is good for the consumer, that's us. Let the manufacturers continue to compete against each other.
Pete
... She then said, in her opinion, it was the chain that holds you in seagrass and that you need to put plenty out. In her opinion my 8mm chain was too light and 10mm would be better. This would still not solve my problems because overnight anchoring is different from being out for the day....
Here a posting I very much like , he perpaired to admin to have to have seven attempts to set his anchor.I love my Spade but it failed to set three times on seagrass last year. So I wouldn't expect it to be a panacea for this particular problem.
Both attempts were inadvertent - rough water combined with low sun and dusk/near dark respectively. I wouldn't anchor knowingly on seagrass out of respect for the marine habitat (and because it's become clear that my anchor doesn't like seagrass!)
By default I set 5:1 scope and reverse slowly to my chosen chain length, stopper the chain and wait until a transit tells me the boat is not moving then increase the revs over the course of 30 seconds to around 3000rpm (10m, 7T boat, 24HP engine.)
The first occasion was in 6m depth just outside St Antoni on Ibiza and I made three attempts where the anchor would not hold at 3000rpm. It stopped the boat at low revs but it seemed that the anchor was not penetrating very thick healthy seagrass - a couple of thick roots came up with the anchor - as I upped the revs and dragged, so I moved to the next cala.
The second occasion was in the Mar Menor and a repeat of my experience in Ibiza. The third occasion was an hour later well after sunset with a seabed of thin mud over what I think was a hard clay pan with very thin sickly looking seagrass, so doesn't really count for this thread. It took seven attempts to set the anchor that night. I'm glad I persisted as the F6 winds that were forecast came and dawn saw one of the three other boats in the anchorage being towed off the beach
Spade purchased. On boat. In mud. Will look for seagrass.
But whatbout the Jambo anchor which popped up unannounced on YouTube? Claims to be perfect forall seabeds.
(Dick Emery )Spade purchased. On boat. In mud. Will look for seagrass.
But whatbout the Jambo anchor which popped up unannounced on YouTube? Claims to be perfect forall seabeds.
There are some places in the Med which provide shelter but which have no sand. or the sand is too shallow.
Medium or even heavy weed is a fact of life in some locations. I would not be as pessimistic as some of the views expressed in this thread.
It is important that the anchor can engage with the substrate below the weed, but this is achievable:
Does nature make monocultures? More like fertilizer runoff. Fish might prefer a more mixed seabed. But what do I lnow.?
Really? This does not really justify an answer but...
Unless you are somewhere truly remote, the area sea grass is far, far below historic values, so while you favorite anchoring spot is grass covered, like forest, we still need much more. As for whether nature has value, I'm sure you were taught this is school.
I really hate the "but what do I know" argument. Trump uses that when he re-tweats what he knows to be damaging falsehoods. It implies you are that you have no duty to research or support any statement, and that there is no harm in repeating falsehoods or floating harmfull theories. This is an over reaction on my part, but I really hate that figure of speech.
As for ferti;lizer run-off, I think you propbably know that that feeds algae blooms, which block light penetration, and reduce sea grass. You've read that. It's well established as theory, to the point of being fact.
Well there you go. I really don't know.
I saw the Jambo 'user recommendation' video and thought ''swapping a 25kg Delta for a 40kg Jambo (iirc). Well, it'll punch through seagrass but doesn't prove much else.'' Especially as it dragged more than a metre under engine before digging in. When I've noticed my Spade doing that I've either hauled it up and reanchored or taken a concious risk and being caught out twice last year.To put this in context, commonly omitted
The yacht that uses this anchor is 49' and Rocna would suggest a 33kg anchor ...This anchor looks set - but again there is no data as to the hold actually produced ...Suggesting that a 60kg anchor is comparable to a 20kg anchor takes some stretch of the imagination and in the absence of a direct comparison lacks any credibility.