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Anchoring
At some point in your boating career
you will probably want to anchor. You may want to stop and fish, swim,
have lunch or stay overnight. A second reason to drop anchor may be
to control the boat if bad weather is blowing you ashore or if your
engine has quit and the wind and current are pushing you into shallow
water or other boats.
The
first step in anchoring is to select the proper anchor. In spite of
claims to the contrary there is no single anchor design that is best
in all conditions. On most pleasure boats the three anchors you will
find most are the fluke or danforth type, the plow and the mushroom
anchor.
Mushroom anchors do not have the holding
power of a fluke or plow anchor and should only be used on small, lighter
weight boats. A local marine supply store can help you select the proper
anchor for your boat and for the waters in which you will be boating.
Anchors also must have something
to attach them to the boat. This is called the anchor rode and may consist
of line, chain or a combination of both. The whole system of gear including
anchor, rode, shackles etc. is called ground tackle.
The amount of rode that you have out
(scope) when at anchor depends generally on water depth and weather
conditions. The deeper the water and the more severe the weather the
more rode you will put out. For recreational boaters let it suffice
to say that at a minimum you should have out five to eight times (5
to 1 scope for day anchoring and 6 to 8 to 1 for overnight) the depth
of the water plus the distance from the water to where the anchor will
attach to the bow. For example, if you measure water depth and it shows
four feet and it is three feet from the top of the water to your bow
cleat you would multiply seven feet by six to eight to get the amount
of rode to put out.

STEPS
TO SMOOTH ANCHORING
- Select an area that offers maximum
shelter from wind, current, boat traffic etc.
- Pick a spot with swinging room in
all directions. Should the wind change, your boat will swing bow to
the wind or current, whichever is stronger.
- Determine depth and bottom conditions
and calculate the amount of rode you will put out.
- If other boats are anchored in the
area you select, ask the boat adjacent to the spot you select what
scope they have out so that you can anchor in such a manner that you
will not bump into the neighboring vessel.
- Anchor with the same method used by
nearby boats. If they are anchored bow and stern, you should too.
If they are anchored with a single anchor from the bow, do not anchor
bow and stern. Never anchor from the stern alone.
- Rig the anchor and rode. Check shackles
to make sure they are secured with wire tied to prevent the screw
shaft from opening.
- Lay out the amount of rode you will
need on deck in such a manner it will follow the anchor into the water
smoothly without tangling.
- Cleat off the anchor line at the point
you want it to stop. (Dont forget or youll be diving for
your anchor.)
- With the bow to the wind or current
in the spot you have selected, stop the boat and slowly start to motor
back. Lower the anchor until it lies on the bottom then slowly let
out the rode as the boat drifts back. Backing down slowly will assure
that the chain will not foul the anchor and prevent it from digging
into the bottom.
- When all the anchor line has been
let out, back down on the anchor with engine in idle reverse to help
set the anchor. (Be careful not to get the anchor line caught in your
prop)
- While reversing on a set anchor, keep
a hand on the anchor line, a dragging anchor will telegraph itself
as it bumps along the bottom. An anchor that is set will not shake
the line.
- When the anchor is firmly set look
around for reference points in relation to the boat. You can sight
over your compass to get the bearing of two different fixed points
(house, rock, tower, etc. ) Over the next hour or so, make sure those
reference points are in the same place. If not youre probably
dragging anchor.
- Begin anchor watch. Everyone should
check occasionally to make sure youre not drifting.

- Retrieve the anchor by pulling or
powering forward slowly until the anchor rode hangs vertically at
the bow. Cleat the line as the boat moves slowly past the vertical.
This will use the weight of the boat to free the anchor and protect
you from being dragged over the bow. Once free, raise the anchor to
the waterline. Clean if necessary and let the rode dry before stowing
away.
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