Rain City
Crew Member
This is exactly what I was thinking about doing. I'm staring at it anyways so it's not hard to count the red marks. If I miss one them I'll have an extra 25', NBD. I think the bow hatch might be my solo solution to knocking the chain down.As others have said, thanks for sharing (there is a reason anchoring is called the cruisers TV - and yes, we ALL eventually produce content!) and good on you for gettin out and learning.
A couple minor comments-
- the chain piling up in the locker is one of those dirty little secrets that an amazingly large portion of boats have - even on $$$ production cruisers - the ability to have a deep enough locker to avoid it is quite rare - there are all kinds of "solutions" that depend on the exact setup - our locker is open at the top and I have to reach in and knock down the pile every 10' or so - other solutions include a stick (if your hawse pipe is big enough) and unfortunately (as you found out) if the access is from the interior, it turns into a 2 person job with one inside knocking it down - no easy solution.
- The dead battery probably tells you exactly which one the windlass is wired to - that is going to be the biggest draw on the whole boat (which is why some people, me include chose to wire it to a start battery as opposed to a house) - but it also illustrates one other point - never trade one form of safety for another until you are ready - i.e don't turn off the main motor until you are safely anchored, and even more importantly, don't bring up the anchor (relative safety) until you have a motor running.
Finally, on the marking of the chain - I'm of the opinion that simpler is better - i.e some people have fancy colour codes for each 5' - and you end up needing a laminated sheet to remember the code - I go on the "horeshoes and hand grenades" philosophy - i.e if you calculate you need 79' of scope, throw out 100 - so I just lay the chain out on the dock and spray paint every 25' red - simple, easy to ready, and only needs re-painting every few years.
I think I understand most of what you're saying. Speaks to my experience level I guess. I'm assuming the previous owner went with tons of chain to deal with the rope binding issue. I certainly couldn't pull it all up by hand.Hey Rain City—-not sure how big your boat is or why you use so much chain but I’m sure you have your reasons. But here’s a quick and dirty way to deal with slack rode line and a gypsy that doesn’t want to grab it, or rode line that isn’t stacking properly in your anchor locker....
I have two tie-down points for my anchor when it’s in the nest—-the pin that goes through the anchor and a short cord with a carabiner attached that’s attached to a bow cleat with the carabiner clipped to the anchor shackle
I mention that because that cord serves two purposes—-yes, it’s back-up to the pin to hold the anchor in place but more importantly, when I’m in a sketchy situation and need to get rode back into the boat FAST or need to shorten the scope and don’t want to use power on the Lemar, I take that cord, pull open the spring-loaded fairlead arm that applies pressure against the gypsy, put the cord around its base, then step on the carabiner. That move keeps the spring-loaded fairlead arm up and allows me to hand-haul the rode line up and and over the roller and feed it down into the anchor locker all in the same movement.
I got pretty good at that maneuver this summer , so good that every time I needed to haul the anchor, I started hand-hauling as much rode into the boat as I could, then once I got to the chain, dropped the link into the gypsy teeth and used power for the remaining chain scope and anchor. The main reason: I found that occasionally when hauling under power, the knot between the brait and the chain would get to the gypsy and fail to clear it (probably because it’s not tapered enough) The gypsy teeth spun on the knot and beat the crap out of the splice so to prevent that, I started using the hand-haul method mentioned above, then once past the rode/chain splice, I dropped the chain into the gypsy teeth and used power after that
Also, I keep a plastic tub on the deck. If I have to hand-haul rode in a hurry to take out slack, I just throw the coils in the basket and re-fasten the snubber and deal with getting the rode back into the anchor locker later
Glad you survived that ordeal—-we’ve all had those moments. You were lucky you had another set of hands with you!
30 Commander (15000 lbs)