Last week I decided to mark my anchor line with depth markers. I purchased the PVC tapes that had 30-foot markers. That is, each PVC tape maker had monotonically increasing numbers starting at 30', then 60', then 90', etc with the last one being 300'.
My chain is 50' long and the rope is 200' long. So I started with the 60' marker at 10' into the rope section, and then proceeded to mark off 30' increment until I was 10' from the ropes end. This all went well and found myself with 240' of chain and rope on the foredeck.
OK -- so now I had to get all of that chain and rope back into the locker in such a way it would feed out without getting tangled. I decided to simply coil up the rope as best I could and then placed that into the locker. I followed this by coiling the chain until all of that was in the locker.
Was coiling the rope and chain the right thing to do for ensuring the anchor line would not jam/tangle when being feed out?
I recall reading in Chapman's that I should have coiled the rope and chain in a figure 8!
I'm quite prepared to redo the anchor line stowage if others think I stowed it incorrectly.
Thanks. 🙂
P.S. That chain is heavy. 😉
My chain is 50' long and the rope is 200' long. So I started with the 60' marker at 10' into the rope section, and then proceeded to mark off 30' increment until I was 10' from the ropes end. This all went well and found myself with 240' of chain and rope on the foredeck.
OK -- so now I had to get all of that chain and rope back into the locker in such a way it would feed out without getting tangled. I decided to simply coil up the rope as best I could and then placed that into the locker. I followed this by coiling the chain until all of that was in the locker.
Was coiling the rope and chain the right thing to do for ensuring the anchor line would not jam/tangle when being feed out?
I recall reading in Chapman's that I should have coiled the rope and chain in a figure 8!
I'm quite prepared to redo the anchor line stowage if others think I stowed it incorrectly.
Thanks. 🙂
P.S. That chain is heavy. 😉