Joel - and Steve for that matter,
This came back to haunt me twice this year. As many here may know, I brought Empathy to the FL Keys last winter. I had a major dragging incident in eel grass there.
Then again this summer, all three of the Newport trimarans that went to the Vineyard for the Black Dog Dash dragged in the basin at Cuttyhunk on the way there. Eel grass again. I was the first to drag, before the wind had clocked, so for me I was actually somewhat protected. It was coming from the west, over the hill. Here's my drag path:
Cuttyhunk-anchor-drag.png
The other two didn't drag until the wind was out of the northeast, coming right over that isthmus.
I anchored in roughly 6' of water at about 7pm. At around 4am I noticed the our swing started to feel irregular. We were in the marsh, half a boat length or less from the east isthmus.
I'm in a whole different class from big boats & even big multihulls. My boat is 23' long and only weighs 2000 lbs. I race and only do coastal cruising, so I'm not going to carry 100 lbs of chain. I carry probably 20' of fairly small chain maybe 20 lbs, and the rest is rode. I don't calculate my scope, I just eyeball it - my chock is about 2' above the waterline. I admit my rode is not marked, I just imagine that I can tell what 5x the vertical looks like. When I'm backing and she stops, I figure the rode is a straight line, so I don't need to know what's true under the water, it's the same triangle that I'm looking at above the water. Is this naive?
The problem I find with eel grass is that the anchor holds just fine (I have a Spade A60), but it rips up a huge clump of seabed, with a root system that doesn't shed. Then it's not a spade any more, it's just a ball, and a fairly light one. Would more scope really change this?
In looking at
Spade's sizing chart now, it does seem that I undersized my anchor slightly. They have a note there that I missed when I bought it, "It is recommended to move up to the next size anchor for Catamarans." The A60 is rated for 24' & 4800 lbs. While I'm <1/2 that weight, I have three hulls tugging, and probably 3x the surface area right at the waterline. So that spells A80.
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