All-around anchor
If there is one question that will bring on a serious discussion, it is "what's the best anchor?" I've been sailing almost 40 years and have been as far afield as across the Pacific, mostly anchoring except for the big cities. For many years we used Danforths or one of its clones. Those things have tremendous holding power. Unfortunately, raw holding power is seldom the issue. More often it is a case of how quickly it will set...and then reset WHEN it pulls, for whatever reason (it will).Anecdotaly, I've been in a harbor (Honiara)with about a dozen boats on the hook when we had a wind shift of only 15 knots, giving a rotten chop where we were. (A little Aussie boat was taking water over the bow.) The only two boats that did NOT drag were two of us on Bruces. I have lost count of the number of times that our Danforth pulled when the wind or current changed 180 degrees. We carry both 20-kg and 25-kg Bruces, chain for the bower and line for the little one. If I were to head out again, particularly to somewhere I might find hurricane, I'd carry a disassembled Fortress - provided I was sure the wind would not shift. That light aluminum stock has been reported to bend (according to the grapevine).With the arrogance of long-time sailors (and fighter pilots in general), I haven't even read what others have to say on the subject. Only "new guys" will be influenced by anything we say.By the way, the most secure mooring we have ever picked up was a chain connected to a sunken Japanese bulldozer, at Tulagi.With the pathetic treatment that history gets in the schools, these days, only the sailing community has any idea where Honiara and Tulagi might be found.