S
Scott Narum
Whew...I just got back home after my worst anchoring disaster. I cruise the Columbia River on my Hunter 326, and in the summer fate has it that the wind blows the opposite direction of the current. On the lower stretches of the river, it blows HARD, even at night, and for more challenge the tide effects reverse the river flow. Anyway, as has happened frequently, I was attempting to anchor in the evening, and set the anchor with no problem in sand in about 15 feet. However, the wind overcomes the current and the boat rides up over the anchor. Then it starts swinging around and causes the rode to wrap around the keel. The only way out at this point is tricky motoring. THIS TIME, however, I managed to wrap the rode around the prop shaft. Damage? Still to be determined, but it starts with a 40 MILE TOW! What I could see was: bent prop shaft, prop skeg nearly ripped out of hull, engine yanked back towards prop destroying mounts (if not more!), stripped coupling bolts, huge gouge in floor, nearly destroyed packing gland assembly. I don't know yet about the engine or transmission. I was lucky that I did not sink the boat!! Let this be a lesson to all of us...motoring with anchor deployed is very hazardous!QUESTION: How do I prevent the boat from riding up the anchor and fouling the keel? My tow guy suggested deploying a sea anchor from the stern...I thought that was actually a prety good idea. Anyone do this? I have tried a stern achor in addition to the bow anchor, but so far I haven't used a large enough anchor. It also makes it very difficult to deploy and retrieve.Comments, please?Thanks!Scott