GHA
Well-Known Member
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Oversized anchors are a recipe for a slipped disc or worse when your windlass fails, and actual weight in the anchor is irrelevant compared to the weight of a decent amount of chain deployed. It is the surface area of the anchor, how well it is set, and its tendency to break out under load that is important, and none of these factors are directly proportional to weight. I agree 100% with Jumbleduck - an appropriately sized NG anchor is all you need.
Round the coast near home very likely all you'll need, but you'll find very few experienced long distance cruisers who don't prefer to go up a size or maybe even 2. Most years there will be boats on the rocks from surprise thunderstorm with huge winds - people like to get the odds in their favour as much as possible. When it really kicks off the chain will be off the seabed so anchor weight/size is all you have left.
All you need almost but maybe not all of the time....
Been done to death over the years on the forums.
A few hours will should sort out an emergency retrieval system from gear already onboard with leap frogging on halyard winches or whatever which doesn't involve extreme manual labour, good idea to think it through before the windlass fails (as it likely will..)tv
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