Just got my march edition of B&B and read with interest Bill Cortens article on offshore anchoring. He talks about leaving out anchor line/water depth of 4/1 to 7/1 depending on the roughness of the weather. However he says that this is only necessary on a sandy or muddy bottom. On a reef (he doesnt mean a coral reef which is protected from the open ocean) he maintains that you only need to put out enough line to hit the bottom and a few extra metres to accommodate the swell.
Now I know that Bill Corten is a guru whose experienced opinions should be respected without question, but I've always worked under the rule that you put out a minimum of 3/1 whatever the bottom. and I thought this was for safety reasons.
He doesn't spell it out, but it seems that it just has to do with making the anchor hold, and when there is marine growth on rocks/reef the shorter rope is fine.
Anchoring on a shorter rope would be more accurate and since we hardly ever anchor on sand, I'm keen to give it a run, but need it explained to me a bit more first. Can someone please help me out?
thanks
Tony