Nostrodamus
New member
I had two firsts for me the other day in anchoring.
a) A French boat shouted across to me that I was too close to him to anchor. I could have understood this if I had actually been anchored but it was still in the roller and no one was on our deck to let it down. I was doing the usual Brit thing for padding around the area looking at depths, swinging room and the best place to anchor. Now I have to say I was wrong here but he **** me off so much I had to anchor closer to him than I would normally have done.
b) A day or so later we went into a anchorage and assessed where to drop the hook in relation to the other boats and was quiet happy where we were. Later the wind picked up and we swung. The one boat that seemed miles away initially was then very near us, so much so that I moved. I later learnt that he had dragged badly a few days ago so was sat in the middle of a small anchorage with 60m of chain out expecting all the other boats around him to move. I was not the only one who had to find somewhere else.
a) A French boat shouted across to me that I was too close to him to anchor. I could have understood this if I had actually been anchored but it was still in the roller and no one was on our deck to let it down. I was doing the usual Brit thing for padding around the area looking at depths, swinging room and the best place to anchor. Now I have to say I was wrong here but he **** me off so much I had to anchor closer to him than I would normally have done.
b) A day or so later we went into a anchorage and assessed where to drop the hook in relation to the other boats and was quiet happy where we were. Later the wind picked up and we swung. The one boat that seemed miles away initially was then very near us, so much so that I moved. I later learnt that he had dragged badly a few days ago so was sat in the middle of a small anchorage with 60m of chain out expecting all the other boats around him to move. I was not the only one who had to find somewhere else.