This weekend was very windy on the Ches. Bay. I was out Sat for a trip from West to East and saw sustained winds at 20-25 kts with gust to 35. Needless to say, I stirred up some sediment in my fuel tank and when it came time to start, I got a couple of minutes while I was taking in the sails, and then the engine quit(otherwise very reliable Yanmar 3HM35F). After bypassing the Racor, minor trouble shooting and repeated attempts to start, there was little or no juice left to kick over the engine.I then sailed as close to the small entrance of a unfamilair marina as posible, set the hook, left my wife on board and dingied in. A local couple graciously gave me a ride to get some cans of diesel, my thinking that maybe my gauge was wrong. It was moving between 1/4 to a little over 1/2 with the waves, but more fuel couldn't hurt. They offered more help if I couldn't get it fixed, so after another hour with darkness approaching and the wind still up, I reluctently asked them for a tow. They towed me in without issue or complaint and offered us drinks and dinner after we tied up in a slip not being used a member of their family. This is why I love boating, because of the quality people you meet!Any way, to solve this problem, I was thinking of installing a small "hopper tank" fed by an electrical pump with an overflow back to the main tank. The engine would then draw from the "hopper tank". The back up mode would be the ability to revert back to the original set-up...I am not an engineer, but I did stay at a holiday inn last night...do you think this would work? Pro's/Con's...Thanks...Bryan