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#1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Pitman , NJ
Posts: 627
Thanks: 40
Thanked 21 Times in 12 Posts
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I've had an anchor stuck myself more than once. Did you try tying it to a rear clear and powering off in the opposite direction in which the boat was drifting at anchor. This will exert a prying force on the anchor and has always gotten mine up(with an occasional tree limb still in the fluke).
Too late in this case but just something to keep in mind if it happens again ![]()
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Paddle faster , I think I here banjos |
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#2 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: NH
Posts: 2,689
Thanks: 33
Thanked 439 Times in 249 Posts
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I tried powering in pretty much every direction. I was a little nervous about pulling a cleat out. I've had the anchor stuck before, usually I can either power or giggle it out. This time I could hear and feel the shank moving but the flukes had to be wedged under something big.
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#3 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Florida (Sebring & Keys), Wolfeboro
Posts: 5,938
Thanks: 2,205
Thanked 776 Times in 553 Posts
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What often happens is that the anchor will slide under the points of three boulders.
![]() I recovered my neighbor's anchor last week (he had tied a float to the anchor line) by running in a big circle around the stuck anchor. The technique has always worked for me. I also have a large galvanized ring that can be slid down the anchor line, over the chain, and down the shank to pull it out by the crown. (Attach a line to it first). ![]() |
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