Hi to the group, i would like to show my home made sail to stabilize my hunter 41 at anchor, for the high freeboard this boat move side to side all the time an never stops.
Hunter faucets and partsAnd now a word from the sponsor...
sometimes you can drag your anchor because of the big swings.Looks like too much trouble. I just let it swing.
He could get a closer picture if the boat would swing closer to him. Oh wait...I too like it. @Valerio, can you get closer photos of the sail and how it is attached?
several thousand miles of cruising. never drug an anchor because of the Hunter swing.sometimes you can drag your anchor because of the big swings.
I never drug an anchor either. I dragged once through very soft mud when I had an undersized Delta.several thousand miles of cruising. never drug an anchor because of the Hunter swing.
Who's making fun? Just making a statement. Don't be so sensitive.I never drug an anchor either. I dragged once through very soft mud when I had an undersized Delta.
Several thousand miles is a nice start but it is not a career. I had cruised many times that distance before my first experience with dragging, and may times that far since. However, swing was not a factor, since my boat did not swing more than 10 degrees (long bridle).
Swinging as little as 30 degrees each side can reduce anchor holding capacity by 50% (force is increased by windage and snubbing, and the anchor can be wiggled). You didn't say how far you were swinging. Swinging makes other people in the anchorage nervous. It also makes the boat take up more room, which is often a problem, or at least impolite.
So while swing may may not be a problem in your eyes, in your experience, the OP has good reasons for what he is doing. There is no need to make fun of him.
With any anchor alarm I always set it on the anchor with the safety ring set to 20-30' bigger than the length of rode. That way it doesn't alarm unless the anchor moves in any direction.MY SAFE ANCHOR WILL SOUND OFF WITH THE SWING !!!! SOMETHIMES MORE THAN 100 FEET SIDE TO SIDE. All the yucatan pensinsula gulf side is very shallow, we can anchor in open sea whit little waves but the wind is allways strong.
What counts is the number of hours, days, or weeks at anchor and the range of conditions and locations; not the numbers of miles traveled between anchorings. Also, the solution for dragging anchor is a bigger, or better, anchor and/or better anchoring technique; not a riding sail. Nevertheless, it's nice to see a report of one that's not expensive to make, and that works! I wonder who here can boast even having spent, for example, 1000 h or more at anchor (on the hook) per year, aboard.several thousand miles of cruising. never drug an anchor because of the Hunter swing.
Yes, I was making a little fun.Who's making fun? Just making a statement. Don't be so sensitive.