I was reading a thread over on the "ask all sailors" section on anchoring and I thought about a tip I learned from a cruiser. My slip in Long Beach was 4 from the end and a lot of the cruiser stop in Long Beach and many tied up at the end of my dock. I would go out of my way to talk to them about their boats and sailing experiences. They were the most interesting group of sailors I've ever met. Anyway, what brought this up was I had spread my anchor line out on the dock to check it out. The cruiser asked me how I secured it in the anchor locker. I was embarressed to tell him it was not secured but that I was going to bolt the end in place in the locker the first chance I got. He said that was not a good idea because in an anchor emergancy it would be near impossable to get the anchor line free. He told me that most cruisers secure the end of the line with a piece of rope and they have a small float attached to the line. So if they have to cut the anchor line free, they just cut the securing line and cast it off with the small float marking the spot for later retreval. His tip made good sense to me and that was my setup when I put the anchor back on board.