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anchor question...>>>



 
 
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  #11  
Old June 7th, 2004, 04:42 PM
Bob
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Posts: n/a
Default anchor question...>>>

Thank you, thank you, thank you for this link!!!
I saw this anchor in SOMETHING in print several years ago, catalogue or
magazine article, and promptly lost it, and could not remember the name. My
dad has an OMC/Grumman 16' aluminum that gives us both fits sometimes
getting it to hold at anchor in the wind, and when I saw the picture of this
anchor I knew that it would probably be the answer that we were looking for.

Hmm....
Gonna go and be sneaky on him. Order one and get it put on his boat while he
is out of town for the next two weeks. Hehe :-)

Thanx again
Cast far
Bob

"Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers" wrote in
message ...
snip
I went through three of them before I went to the River Anchor. Now, I
carry one of those (20 pound model) and a Richter Anchor
http://www.richteranchors.com/ and my boat doesn't move. The Richter is
great, but not readily available, where you should be able to get a River
Anchor at Wal-Mart.
--
Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers
http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com
G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods
http://www.herefishyfishy.com



  #12  
Old June 8th, 2004, 02:28 AM
Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers
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Default anchor question...>>>


"Bob" wrote in message news:220xc.54657$3x.53596@attbi_s54...
Thank you, thank you, thank you for this link!!!
I saw this anchor in SOMETHING in print several years ago, catalogue or
magazine article, and promptly lost it, and could not remember the name. My
dad has an OMC/Grumman 16' aluminum that gives us both fits sometimes
getting it to hold at anchor in the wind, and when I saw the picture of this
anchor I knew that it would probably be the answer that we were looking for.

Hmm....
Gonna go and be sneaky on him. Order one and get it put on his boat while he
is out of town for the next two weeks. Hehe :-)


LOL, you are a devious rascal. Can you talk to my kids about sneaking fishing stuff into my boat?


Glad you could use the link.
--
Steve
OutdoorFrontiers
http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com
G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods
http://www.herefishyfishy.com


  #13  
Old June 8th, 2004, 02:44 AM
Wayne.B
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Default anchor question...>>>

On Mon, 07 Jun 2004 15:42:54 GMT, "Bob" wrote:
My
dad has an OMC/Grumman 16' aluminum that gives us both fits sometimes
getting it to hold at anchor in the wind, and when I saw the picture of this
anchor I knew that it would probably be the answer that we were looking for.


===========================================

The key to getting ANY anchor to hold is sufficient scope (ratio of
anchor line to water depth). 7 to 1 is considered ideal, 5 to 1 will
usually suffice. Also use a 3 or 4 foot length of chain as others
have mentioned. The implication is that if you are anchoring in 30
feet of water, you need between 150 and 200 feet of line. Many small
fishing boats do not carry that much. I've found that a mid-sized
canvas tote bag will hold 200 feet of 3/8 line, and the anchor. Just
lay the line into the bag, do not coil, and it will pay out with no
snarling or kinking.

  #14  
Old June 8th, 2004, 11:05 AM
Bob
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Default anchor question...>>>


"Wayne.B" wrote in message
...

The key to getting ANY anchor to hold is sufficient scope (ratio of
anchor line to water depth). 7 to 1 is considered ideal, 5 to 1 will
usually suffice. Also use a 3 or 4 foot length of chain as others
have mentioned. The implication is that if you are anchoring in 30
feet of water, you need between 150 and 200 feet of line. Many small
fishing boats do not carry that much. I've found that a mid-sized
canvas tote bag will hold 200 feet of 3/8 line, and the anchor. Just
lay the line into the bag, do not coil, and it will pay out with no
snarling or kinking.


The real problem is trying to get dear old dad to think like this. He is
rather set in his ways, but this is to be expected as he is now 70! He keeps
thinking about anchoring to fish a spot the same way he used to do it with a
little 14' aluminum row boat. And rather than argue with him, I just want to
get him an anchor that may work better with his 16' and the way that he
wants to use it.

Cast far
Bob


  #15  
Old June 8th, 2004, 11:08 AM
Bob
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Posts: n/a
Default anchor question...>>>


"Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers" wrote in message
...

"Bob" wrote in message

news:220xc.54657$3x.53596@attbi_s54...

Hmm....
Gonna go and be sneaky on him. Order one and get it put on his boat

while he
is out of town for the next two weeks. Hehe :-)


LOL, you are a devious rascal. Can you talk to my kids about sneaking

fishing stuff into my boat?


Glad you could use the link.
--


Right, sure thing. Once I learn how to do it. Can't get me own
flesh-'n-blood to sneak stuff in for me, and I have been working on him for
12 years now. But as soon as I figure out how to talk him into doing this, I
will come up and tackle your kids for you ;-)

Bob


  #16  
Old June 9th, 2004, 04:41 AM
Jerry
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Posts: n/a
Default anchor question...>>>

Wayne.B wrote:

The key to getting ANY anchor to hold is sufficient scope (ratio of
anchor line to water depth). 7 to 1 is considered ideal, 5 to 1 will
usually suffice. Also use a 3 or 4 foot length of chain as others
have mentioned.


Took me a long time to realize what you are saying. Most people don't
realize the amount of rope required to hold a boat properly regardless
of anchor type.



I've found that a mid-sized
canvas tote bag will hold 200 feet of 3/8 line, and the anchor. Just
lay the line into the bag, do not coil, and it will pay out with no
snarling or kinking.


I'll have to give this a try. Nothing drives me crazy as fast as a
knotted up rope when trying to get a anchor out before drifting away
from the spot you want to be at. Right now I'm using polly rope with
fair success.

Jerry

  #17  
Old June 10th, 2004, 02:14 AM
Sarge
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Posts: n/a
Default anchor question...>>>

Someone wrote: "Nothing drives me crazy as fast as a knotted up rope when
trying to get a anchor out before drifting away
from the spot you want to be at."

I use to complain about the same thing. I now carry 200 feet of anchor rope
in my 19-foot bay boat since I fish areas with strong tides and large boat
traffic and the depth is up to 40 feet deep in some areas.. I store my
anchor rope on outdoor extension cord holders designed to hold 100 feet of
outdoor extension cord. They store very easy in a small storage bin on my
boat. I keep one hooked to the anchor and if I need more then 100 feet of
anchor line, I hook the two lengths together with a shackle. Both anchor
lines have spliced eyes on both ends. I attach a 5 foot chain to the anchor
and join the chain to the rope with a shackle.

Sarge


  #18  
Old June 10th, 2004, 03:59 AM
Joe Haubenreich
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Default anchor question...>>>

Well, I usually break them off or lose them long before that happens anyway,
so I guess that's ok.

Joe
______________
"pat gustafson" wrote in message
...
Joe Haubenreich wrote:

Mushroom anchors are useful to keep the back of your boat from swinging
around, but your main anchor attached to your bow should be a type

intended
to grip mud, rocks, or gravel bottom. I also use a Danforth anchor, but my
old partner made his own "gripper" anchors from lengths of iron pipe (mine
were house jack sections) filled with concrete and two 18-inch pieces of
rebar inserted through it at right angles. If I were to make my own today,
I'd probably use a piece of aluminum downspout and long steel bolts to
minimize corrosion.

Joe,
Concrete and Aluminum really don't mix well. There is a reaction between
the two that corrodes the aluminum and weakens the concrete.

pat


  #19  
Old June 11th, 2004, 12:29 AM
Ookie Wonderslug
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Posts: n/a
Default anchor question...>>>

On Wed, 9 Jun 2004 20:14:12 -0500, "Sarge"
wrote:

Someone wrote: "Nothing drives me crazy as fast as a knotted up rope when
trying to get a anchor out before drifting away
from the spot you want to be at."

I use to complain about the same thing. I now carry 200 feet of anchor rope
in my 19-foot bay boat since I fish areas with strong tides and large boat
traffic and the depth is up to 40 feet deep in some areas.. I store my
anchor rope on outdoor extension cord holders designed to hold 100 feet of
outdoor extension cord. They store very easy in a small storage bin on my
boat. I keep one hooked to the anchor and if I need more then 100 feet of
anchor line, I hook the two lengths together with a shackle. Both anchor
lines have spliced eyes on both ends. I attach a 5 foot chain to the anchor
and join the chain to the rope with a shackle.

Sarge


So I ain't the only one with an extension cord reel holding my anchor
rode. Cool.
  #20  
Old June 12th, 2004, 08:15 PM
Sierra fisher
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Posts: n/a
Default attaching chain

Stupid question: Do you attach the rope to the chain and the chain to the
anchor OR attach both the rope and chain to the anchor, ie, chain is not
attached to rope?

--


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"Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers" wrote in
message ...

"Marty S." wrote in message
...
Question... for a small jon boat on a reservoir (I'm in Maryland, and

I
fish on Liberty Reservoir, for those of you familiar with this area),

what
type of anchor would be best? I presently have a small "mushroom"

anchor
(8
lbs, I think) but it doesn't hold the boat in place -- I tend to drift.

Any
suggestions? I think the bottom is mostly mud but I'm not exactly sure.


Marty,

If you're having a problem with the mushroom anchor, try something like a
River Anchor. A 12 or 15 pound model with 3 feet of chain will hold your
boat very well.

A model like this will suffice.


http://www.basspro.com/servlet/catal...arget=bro wse
--
Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers
http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com
G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods
http://www.herefishyfishy.com




 




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