Oh no worries Rich.  You will have to do a lot worse than that to offend me. :) 
 Great story by the way.  Best one I have is a go fast boat that wasn't paying 
attention.  Launched itself up the shoreline at 60+ mph and landed in some 
bushes about 50 ft up the shoreline.  Your story is much better.  Yes I wish 
you had video too.

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Rich Zimmerman
Sent: Monday, May 18, 2009 11:09 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [UnifliteWorld] Re: Anchor Shopping

 


Kerry,

I hope I did not offend you, but I deal with many new boaters in my yard, and 
see many things that could be avoided with some education.  Boating can be 
dangerous.  I should have known though that , anyone that buys a Uniflite has 
been boating before and knows they were built for boaters.

I try to anchor with all my chain out and just the line touching the water.  I 
get the saftey of chain and the shock absorption of the line.  I also put out a 
sentinal with downriger weights I use for fishing.  You can use less scope with 
this set up.

Here's good article for all on anchoring.  

http://www.boatingonthehudson.com/new/index.php  

I once saw 5 boats on one anchor in a crowded gunk hole all not facing the same 
direction, and a guy in a go fast came cruising buy and cut his anchor line and 
wraped it around both props.  Next all the five captains fired up their vessels 
and put them in forward and they went around in circles until they ran aground 
towing the speed boat along.  You could just imagine what was said. I wish I 
had a video of that.







Thanks

Rich Zimmerman


--- On Mon, 5/18/09, Kerry Lebel <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Kerry Lebel <[email protected]>
Subject: [UnifliteWorld] Re: Anchor Shopping
To: [email protected]
Date: Monday, May 18, 2009, 12:43 PM

Rich this is all good info.  Thanks.  I could points for ya though.  I would 
have preferred to wait an anchor in more shallow water as well.  Unfortunately 
it was not an option.  The winds were coming out of the South and blowing the 
boat directly into deeper water and into the ferry/shipping lanes.  I needed to 
drop quickly.  About another 200 yards out and there is a shelf that drops the 
water depth to about 200 ft.  At which point the anchor would have been 
useless.  Also, I have taken the power squadron class and my wife was Coast 
Guard.  So I'm not a complete newbie to boating.  Just mostly to this boat in 
particular.  I have been boating about 12 years.  This is just the first time I 
have owned a boat of this size.  I am getting used to all the "quirky" things 
the PO seemed to have done to it. (like reversed fuel diagrams)  As for 
cruising speeds we usually run around 1500 rpms which in that boat puts me 
between 10-12 mph depending on currents.  The boat came with all that original 
chain.  I do agree that it was plenty heavy.  The ideal windlass on the boat 
will pull 5/8" line in so maybe I will look into some of that as well to drop 
the costs and weight a bit.  I am looking forward to doing a lot more swinging 
from the hook.  The boat is setup very well for it and we have a nice dinghy 
setup as well.  I did a dock walk yesterday and the majority of the cruisers 
around here seemed to have Delta's on their boats.

 

Kerry

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Rich Zimmerman
Sent: Monday, May 18, 2009 8:53 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [UnifliteWorld] Re: Anchor Shopping

 


Kerry,

What the chances they took the fender and left the rest?  Thats a lot of work 
for a small boat to haul.  You may want to grapple for it.  You have the GPS 
location.

I have a Delta which I am happy with on 30' of chain.  It replaced a Danforth 
that I used for years.  The Danforth is incredible in mud and sand, but bad in 
grass and shells.  It also will not reset in a tide change or wind change.  I 
was in one blow of 50+ on the Delta and it held fine in mud.  I carry three.  
the third being a small lunch hook I can use for a kedge in a grounding or as a 
stern hook.  There is no swiss army anchor.  They all were designed for a 
particular job.  The plow is the closest all around IMHO, but has limitations.

See what everyone else in your area uses.  Be sure to match your boating style 
with theirs.  Fair weather boaters get by with light weight tackle, and 
cruisers often have heavy multiple set ups.  What is the bottom like in your 
anchoring area?  
Your last set up was a good choice, but too much chain for a plaining hull 
IMHO.  Thats a lot of weight in the bow.  Boat lenth + Line is good for my 
area.  I don't have rock or coral.
If you run as displacement, then all chain is great.  Be sure to use a line 
shock absorber from your cleat to the water line with a belly in the chain to 
stop the banging in damage from all chain.  Use chafing gear in a blow on line. 
 You can go thru a 5/8 line in a few minuetes.  even a rag will work.  

If you have never pulled anchor, and would up on the hard at night, you have 
missed one of boatings plesures.  Right after that, you will be come an expert 
on ground tackle and how to use it.  You may want to do that now and miss out 
on some of the fun.  Trawlers tend to anchor more than other power boaters.  
Check their web sites.  Remember the weight is not a factor for them or 
sailors.  

Remember, the only thing between you and those rocks is your ground tackle.  
You didn't plan on dropping anchor where you did.  You only had about a 5 to 
one ratio in 45' of water.  If you did not have all chain you may have dragged 
it the blow you described.  I would have prefered to anchor in much less water, 
ie: wait till you drift closer to shore and then reley on your ground tackle.  
I would want a 7 to one or more in the conditions you were in. 

You as the captain are responsible for your vessel, crew and guests.  Maritime 
law is very much different than what you are used to.  Safe boating requires 
knowledge.  Don't go out in conditions you may not be able to handle.  Your 
Uniflite will bring you thru most bad situations, but a lot depends on you.  
Learn and study as much as you can, and it's a great enjoyable sport.  It can 
be frought with dangers. Be safe.  Take a USPS or Coast Guard Aux safe boating 
class as a starter.  You will never know too much about boating, and will learn 
everyday.  Think before you act, twice.




Thanks

Rich Zimmerman
914-478-0482
914-588-4407 Cell

--- On Mon, 5/18/09, Kerry Lebel <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Kerry Lebel <[email protected]>
Subject: [UnifliteWorld] Anchor Shopping
To: [email protected]
Date: Monday, May 18, 2009, 1:16 AM

Well…the anchor and chain are gone.  300ft of 3/8” chain and a 45# anchor.  
Someone cut the line and took the fender.  You guys called it.  Saturday night 
I was talking to a vessel assist guy and he said another 42ft Uniflite called 
in that they were taking on water.  Anyone on this list?  Anyway, I am on the 
hunt for a new anchor. Should I stuck to traditional CQR or go with a Delta or 
Rocna?

 

Kerry

 





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