What can you handle
Donald,Everyone has their own opinion when it comes to anchoring, sail tactics, politics, religion…. The question is what anchoring system will work for YOU and your boat. 100 feet of chain is nice but could you pull it up without hurting your back? Do you want to install a windlass to do the heavy lifting? Are you going to cruise down south in coral areas? Are you going to anchor in deep (40 feet or more) water? In rocky areas of New England? Or are you just going to anchor in a small cove for lunch on a day trip in the Chesapeake Bay?I've had my boat from Maine to Pensacola Fl and went down the intracoastal. Most (98%) of the time I am in the Bay. What works for ME and my '84 Hunter 34 is 10 feet 5/16 chain and 200 feet of 1/2 inch Yale Brait (8 strand single braid) with the original 22 lb Bruce anchor that came with the boat. Originally, I had 20 ft of 5/16 chain but I do not have a windlass and most of my anchoring is in the Chesapeake Bay so I cut the chain in half. I anchor most of the time with one anchor in less than 10 ft of water in a sheltered cove with a mud bottom. The chain picks up a lot of mud. I do use an anchor sentinel more to keep the anchor line from wrapping between the rudder and keel then for extra holding though I sleep better at night with the sentinel. And sleeping peacefully at night in all wx is what it is all about.I have a second anchor in the rear cockpit seat locker with 250 ft Yale Brait, 6 ft of SS chain (about 3/8 if I remember) attached to a Fortress FX-23 14 lb anchor. I used two anchors from the bow spread 180 deg apart in the intracoastal to reduce swing and ensure a good night sleep.Now take this information, read some more books about anchoring and come up with a solution that works for you and your boat. DJ