Hi all,
I'd like to tap in to the vast knowledge that you all contain for some advise.
Our family has owned a boat since my birth and we've recently acquired a new (to us) boat. Our family has an annual gathering at our cabin near the lake and we usually leave the boat in the water for the whole week and anchor it overnight un-attended. Our cabin is with-in sight of the beach and we can always see the boat at anchor but its a 1/3 to 1/2 mile away. We keep binoculars handy to keep an eye on it. The beach is very uniform and gentle sloping, say 100' of water out from the shore line is about 4-5' water depth. There is no real surprises in the water either, the bottom is sand with patches of clay.
So here's the dilemma I'm going over in my head. The old boat was a 91' Celebrity 180 CX the new boat is a 98' Sea Ray 210 Bowrider. From my reading the new boat is probably 1000lbs heavier than the old boat. We've recently used an Anchor Buddy and a 20lb anchor similar to the one linked the anchor buddy is attached to a 6' section of 3/8" chain which is connected to the anchor.
I usually anchor in 4' of water and ensure that the shallowest point the boat can come in is no less than 3'. At its worst the lake is capable of producing 6-7' waves but it takes a very strong sustained wind for that to happen (Bear Lake ID) and its pretty rare.
So my question to you all is this, is a 20lb anchor still sufficient to hold this large of a boat through 2-3' swells. If the weather gets, bad, and we're very good and keeping a close eye on it, we'll always get someone on the boat and get it under power and in deeper water and usually get it out of the water.
What do you all think, is a larger anchor and or different setup in order? Should I change the anchoring practice I've been following?
Jeremy,
I'd like to tap in to the vast knowledge that you all contain for some advise.
Our family has owned a boat since my birth and we've recently acquired a new (to us) boat. Our family has an annual gathering at our cabin near the lake and we usually leave the boat in the water for the whole week and anchor it overnight un-attended. Our cabin is with-in sight of the beach and we can always see the boat at anchor but its a 1/3 to 1/2 mile away. We keep binoculars handy to keep an eye on it. The beach is very uniform and gentle sloping, say 100' of water out from the shore line is about 4-5' water depth. There is no real surprises in the water either, the bottom is sand with patches of clay.
So here's the dilemma I'm going over in my head. The old boat was a 91' Celebrity 180 CX the new boat is a 98' Sea Ray 210 Bowrider. From my reading the new boat is probably 1000lbs heavier than the old boat. We've recently used an Anchor Buddy and a 20lb anchor similar to the one linked the anchor buddy is attached to a 6' section of 3/8" chain which is connected to the anchor.
I usually anchor in 4' of water and ensure that the shallowest point the boat can come in is no less than 3'. At its worst the lake is capable of producing 6-7' waves but it takes a very strong sustained wind for that to happen (Bear Lake ID) and its pretty rare.
So my question to you all is this, is a 20lb anchor still sufficient to hold this large of a boat through 2-3' swells. If the weather gets, bad, and we're very good and keeping a close eye on it, we'll always get someone on the boat and get it under power and in deeper water and usually get it out of the water.
What do you all think, is a larger anchor and or different setup in order? Should I change the anchoring practice I've been following?
Jeremy,