Not if you've got one of these on anchor-watch.

It lost satellite view, thought it was 200feet ashore and woke everyone up- more than once.
Arghiro wrote:You'll wake up quick enough if it does drag ashore or the wind picks up.
sahona wrote:Arghiro wrote:You'll wake up quick enough if it does drag ashore or the wind picks up.
I didn't last year, and almost lost the boat.
No point in having stuff if it's not available when needed.
sahona wrote:Think you'll get a better rest if you tuck right in under the steeply wooded shoreline?
Not if you've got one of these on anchor-watch.
It lost satellite view, thought it was 200feet ashore and woke everyone up- more than once.
In our tides my swinging room can be 75-100' which is a lot of slack to tangle up. But as I said earlier, going ashore on mud or sand is not a problem unless there are waves & that will wake me anyway.pagoda wrote:sahona wrote:Think you'll get a better rest if you tuck right in under the steeply wooded shoreline?
Not if you've got one of these on anchor-watch.
It lost satellite view, thought it was 200feet ashore and woke everyone up- more than once.
I know this is an ancient thread, but one way I have used to make sure I'm woken if the anchor drags is as follows.
If you drop a couple of kg of sinker , away from the anchor chain- on a 1/8 or 3/16 line from the bow, leaving enough for swinging room. Bring the other end into the cockpit and attach to something like a bucket on the cockpit sole.
Should you drag appreciably, the weight will stay put below, and drag the bucket along the cockpit...making a fair racket, which you won't ignore!
If you find that happening- retrieving the thin line/weight is easy- or in extremis you could cut the line and concentrate on your anchor drag.
No electronics....![]()
Graeme
Ian, on the few occasions I've used this, I've done it off the bow, but your variation sounds worth trying. It would be a bit trickier to get the sinker to balance the bucket (some water??) , with the sinker below keel depth.Booby Trapper wrote:Do you mean you leave the sinker dangling just a meter or so deeper than the keel then if it hits the bottom it will drag the bucket? If that's the case you could drop it from the stern??
Just the job for the RIB's little folding anchor I think. First time I've heard of that method, great idea - assuming of course it can't drag the bucket overboard and get lost.pagoda wrote:
If you drop a couple of kg of sinker ,......
Graeme
I think there's little chance of that...sahona wrote:Just the job for the RIB's little folding anchor I think. First time I've heard of that method, great idea - assuming of course it can't drag the bucket overboard and get lost.pagoda wrote:
If you drop a couple of kg of sinker ,......
Graeme
sahona wrote:Nae galvie buckets on ma boat. All plestik.
I'm now imagining a bit of bungy rubber and a dancing beer bottle! Whatever, the principle is good. Maybe we can have a piccy gallery at the end of the season.