B
Bob in SF
I just had my first experience anchoring our new to us boat. On the positive note, the anchor held fast in the San Franciso Bay mud. Now for the questions. I've attached a photo of my anchor roller, locker and windlass for reference.First, where do I tie the line off when I anchor? I tied it off to the starboard bow cleat, but it seems like you'd want the line to come straight back from the roller. It seems like cleating the line off to the side increases the chance of the line being pulled off the roller. Should it be tied off to the windlass?Next, how do I retrieve the anchor line? Retrieving the anchor line and chain proved to be a real pain. As we motored forward I thought the windlass (manual in our case) would pull in the slack and deposit the line into the locker, but the windlass would grab on the rope. Instead as my wife motored forward my son pulled in the slack and with one hand I pushed the rope into the hole in the locker below the windlass and with the other hand I pulle the rope from below the windlass and flaked it into the front of the locker, but we couldn't do this fast enough and ended up having my wife put it in neutral several times for us to catch up. When we got to the 15' of chain the windlass pulled that in fine, but even just 15' jammed up in the hole a couple times and I had to reach below to un-jam it and flake the chain.Lastly, how can I mount my anchor on the bow roller? The design on our 1990 34' Beneteau seems awful. The roller doesn't stick out enough so that the flukes of the Danforth hit the gelcoat on the bow. It seems like any type of achor would have this same problem on our boat. I know also we'd need something to tie the anchor down while underway. The whole roller assembly seems an integral part of the bow so I can't see removing it to install a longer roller. Has anyone else had this same issue and found a work around?Thanks in advance! Bob
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