Anchorage
uote=Kings Gambit;1236196]So, my wife and I sail into an anchorage at the eastern end of Santa Cruz Island, which is a National Park. There are a couple of yachts already anchored there on a single hook, one of which appears to have sailed down from British Columbia. We take a spot a respectable distance from each, drop the hook and spend the night. All is well. The next day the two yachts depart leaving us alone in the anchorage; it's Wednesday. The following day, Thursday, a guy and his wife sailing in a Catalina 34 arrive around noon. He putts around me a couple of times fairly close, but says nothing. He arrives upwind of us & slightly to port, near a shallow reef offering a nice vista of the anchorage area ahead, and drops his hook. Our depth is about 25' and I have about 110' of ground tackle out. By the time he drops back to set he's within my swinging radius. No problem until he starts rowing out a stern anchor. I hail him and advise that he's setting inside my radius, and that when the wind changes to east as it does nearly every morning out there, I could swing into him. He responds to me: "Put out a stern anchor!" This "exchange" goes on for a while but he's actually ignoring me until he's anchored by the bow & stern and resting in his cockpit. I then pull out my loud hailer so I'm sure he can hear me being up wind and advise him that he had created a potentially hazardous situation that might cause damage to our boats. He ignores me with a dismissive gesture.
Some time later he's out in the dinghy; I'm in the cockpit with a cigar--so I probably appear "calmed down." He comes over, introduces himself, and offers to put out my stern anchor (which is attached to the stern rail) and help me pick it up. I told him I'd like it better if he re-anchored outside my radius. That I have "priority" here and it's his responsibility to stay clear of me; not the other way around, and that I'm sure he knows that. He responds "You're in the sweet spot. You're keeping others from enjoying this side of the anchorage by requiring too much [swinging] room; this is a popular anchorage." I look around--"Sir--there's nobody in here but you and me!" "Well, there'll be more when the weekend arrives. That's the way we do things here, we all get along." [The hailing port on my boat is outside of the local area.] I reply, "Sir--this is a NATIONAL PARK; when we arrived there was a Canadian boat in here--now how would he or I know it's the culture here to deploy a stern anchor?" He said: "I've been coming here for more than 20 years--that's my traditional spot up there, and I'm not moving!
So what's the solution--what would you do??[/quote]