Hear! hear! to Maine Sail, but in further answer
to your question, my "stern anchor" is lighter than my primary bow anchor, namely 1/2 in 3-strand nylon instead of 9/16 in ; carries far less chain, and has a lighter anchor (22-lb Bruce vs 46-lb CQR). As Maine Sail said, it is used principally to keep the boat from swinging somewhere I don't want it to go in tight harbors or anchorages, or in some cases, to keep the boat more-or-less facing the swell when the wind dies at night (usually). Normally, in the tight anchorages I'm in, there might not be enough room to pay out the same scope as the bow anchor, unless you want the rode lying in a pile on the bottom, in which case it's not helping much! (Of course if the stern anchor is in much shallower water, the "scope" could be the same on much less rode out.)The best way to get one up in my (aching-back) opinion if you have room and depth to turn the boat, and if you don't have a stern anchor roller, is to recover the bow anchor by paying out the stern rode (if you have enough), then transfer the stern rode to the bow roller and haul it up (that's one reason to keep it light.) Otherwise, you're out in the dink doing it when it could be sloppy, or, as most probably do, hauling it up over the transom dinging up your gelcoat and wood! If the stern anchor is in shallow water, those may be the only options.BEO