Jaxfishgyd
Legendary Member
- Joined
- Jun 2, 2005
- Messages
- 2,442
- Hatteras Model
- 43' DOUBLE CABIN (1970 - 1984)
Let me first give some info...
Am a Native Florida boy, been thru 3 hurricanes, am a repairman with BellSouth and have done storm repairs starting with Camille in 1969, Andrew in S.Fla. , Hugo in S. C., Ivan in Pensacola and (soon) Katrina along with many in between.
HURRICANES SCARE ME... And I admit it.Nor do I apologize for it.
On my boat here in Jacksonville, I have 300' of 3/4" line with 40' of 3/8" chain. My secondary line is 200' of 5/8" line also with 40' of 3/8" chain. I also have a spool of 150' 3/4" line with 20' 3/8" chain to go onto it. AND I have another 150' of 5/8" line again with 20' of 3/8" chain.
For anchors I have a 66lb Bruce, a 55lb Delta Fast Set, 32lb Fortress Aluminum, and a 29lb Guardian Aluminum.
I live on the Ortega River (on the boat) which has many bends and most of the land is 10'-30' high so I can "hide" behind land no matter what direction of the wind. The water depth runs from 5'-30' depending on where I'm at. And is heavy mud.
Staying at the dock is NOT an option as I have a 43' Hatt but am in a 40' slip. Only have 18" between the boat and both rear pilings. Plus even though it's a floating dock, a surge of 8' will put the dock over the pilings.
My first choice is to go to where the river is about 100' wide and tie off onto the trees, and maybe even putting an anchor out bow and/or stern, depending on where I"m at.
The problem with this is, a lot of boats will go there and if one boat breaks lose.......And that happened 2 years ago when we only had strong winds hit here from a hurricane that passed way west of us in the Gulf and we didn't even leave the slip. A shrimp boat broke lose and caused 7 boats to be heavily damaged (I did have 16 lines out all over the dock and to many pilings, most people laughed at me till 6:00am Sunday morning when they were rocking and rolling and their SMALL dock lines were breaking... I had 3/4" lines out).
Know this is long, but here's my main question.
Somewhere many years ago in a boating magazine, I read where someone was caught in a typhoon in the Pacific on some island, put out his anchors, realized he had an extra one with rode so attached it to one of his main anchors by connecting it to the chain of his main, Thereby giving him two anchors two chains and double the rode so if one anchor should pull the second one was still dug in.
And he said that was what saved his boat and life.
Second choice for me is to anchor on the lee side of land with anchors out. My "game plan" would be to put my main rode out and then place my secondary and third lines out 90 degrees either side of it.
I could then put my 4th rode and anchor off one of these three lines. Giving me a tandem anchor system off one rode.
Again realize I'm talking aboat a MAJOR storm hitting us (last hurricane here was in 1964, so while some say we are in a "safe area" I look at it as we are "due" soon).
And I"m not talking about 'saving my boat" but what my best chances are.
Just something for you to think about.
Am a Native Florida boy, been thru 3 hurricanes, am a repairman with BellSouth and have done storm repairs starting with Camille in 1969, Andrew in S.Fla. , Hugo in S. C., Ivan in Pensacola and (soon) Katrina along with many in between.
HURRICANES SCARE ME... And I admit it.Nor do I apologize for it.
On my boat here in Jacksonville, I have 300' of 3/4" line with 40' of 3/8" chain. My secondary line is 200' of 5/8" line also with 40' of 3/8" chain. I also have a spool of 150' 3/4" line with 20' 3/8" chain to go onto it. AND I have another 150' of 5/8" line again with 20' of 3/8" chain.
For anchors I have a 66lb Bruce, a 55lb Delta Fast Set, 32lb Fortress Aluminum, and a 29lb Guardian Aluminum.
I live on the Ortega River (on the boat) which has many bends and most of the land is 10'-30' high so I can "hide" behind land no matter what direction of the wind. The water depth runs from 5'-30' depending on where I'm at. And is heavy mud.
Staying at the dock is NOT an option as I have a 43' Hatt but am in a 40' slip. Only have 18" between the boat and both rear pilings. Plus even though it's a floating dock, a surge of 8' will put the dock over the pilings.
My first choice is to go to where the river is about 100' wide and tie off onto the trees, and maybe even putting an anchor out bow and/or stern, depending on where I"m at.
The problem with this is, a lot of boats will go there and if one boat breaks lose.......And that happened 2 years ago when we only had strong winds hit here from a hurricane that passed way west of us in the Gulf and we didn't even leave the slip. A shrimp boat broke lose and caused 7 boats to be heavily damaged (I did have 16 lines out all over the dock and to many pilings, most people laughed at me till 6:00am Sunday morning when they were rocking and rolling and their SMALL dock lines were breaking... I had 3/4" lines out).
Know this is long, but here's my main question.
Somewhere many years ago in a boating magazine, I read where someone was caught in a typhoon in the Pacific on some island, put out his anchors, realized he had an extra one with rode so attached it to one of his main anchors by connecting it to the chain of his main, Thereby giving him two anchors two chains and double the rode so if one anchor should pull the second one was still dug in.
And he said that was what saved his boat and life.
Second choice for me is to anchor on the lee side of land with anchors out. My "game plan" would be to put my main rode out and then place my secondary and third lines out 90 degrees either side of it.
I could then put my 4th rode and anchor off one of these three lines. Giving me a tandem anchor system off one rode.
Again realize I'm talking aboat a MAJOR storm hitting us (last hurricane here was in 1964, so while some say we are in a "safe area" I look at it as we are "due" soon).
And I"m not talking about 'saving my boat" but what my best chances are.
Just something for you to think about.