........My wife has no interest in running the motor, or learning how, though she'll take the tiller or put the motor in neutral if I ask her to. When we anchor, I put out the anchor gear ahead of time and run the boat to the spot where I want to drop it, then go up to the bow, drop and set it. I may have to go to and from the bow 2 or 3 times before everything is the way I like it but it sure cuts down on the marital friction.................
On our last trip we were out about 24 nights and on a different ancorage almost every night on two lakes we had never seen before. The lakes were formed by glaciers and were very deep (one was over 400 feet deep in less than a 1/4 mile from shore) and the shores dropped off very quickly. This presented a problem in finding an anchorage where the water was shallow enough to throw the anchor and not have to let out more rode than we had and then the problem was if the shallow water was too close to shore we could swing into the shore on the rode.
We would hunt along likely looking spots running as parallel to the shore as possible with me on the bow looking and directing and Ruth on the tiller steering and watching the depth finder and calling out depths every 15 seconds or so. Also most of the time the water was so clear I could see the bottom once we were in 20 feet of water, but also because the water was so clear it was hard to tell how far down it really was. If we could find a place where the water was 9-12 feet deep and I felt we were at least 100-120 feet from shore I would toss the anchor. When Ruth would hear or see the anchor go in she would immediatelly turn the boat away from shore and put the motor in neutral and we would coast to a stop as I let the rode out to the mark..........
..............I wanted on the line. The markers I put on are sure better than the ones with the depth printed on them that take time to read or trying to remember the colors. These you can see as the line is running out of the rode bag real easy. One marker is at 25 feet, two at 50, three ar 75 and 4 at 100 and then they start over again. They indicate the lenght of line and to that I have to add the 30 feet of chain.
One thing we started doing was I quit yelling at Ruth where to go and use hand signals. I keep my right hand down low and and point to port or starboard or take my hand with the fingers straigh down and move my hand fore aft to stay on this course. It works great and we have become actually closer becoming a team while anchoring or using the same method docking or running in narrow channels. If you are around others the hand signals make it look like you know what you are doing vs. the yelling back and forth.
Now this all sounds great and wonderful, but it was developed after some major mistakes like running into rocks on the shore, hitting the center board on the bottom and kicking the rudder up.
Sorry to get off the topic of motors...........
Sum
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