bobjarrard
New member
I once owned a Cape Dory 36 sailboat. Big full keel hull and I had no anchor lifting help other than my arms and back. I had a CQR, 50 feet of chain and 450 of nylon line. Also another 200 feet of nylon to add to the total length if we went to San Clemente Island (the Navy makes you moor way off the beach). I could barely get the whole thing up and in the anchor locker. I would suggest going to a chandler, piling everything you want to use in the way of anchor gear into a big laundry basket and then pick it up 100 times dead lift from the floor. If you cannot do that, then maybe it is time to think over an anchor winch or lighter gear. Myself, I would vote for strip out the weight first as all mechanical devices are suspect in a marine environment. Although slow, I have never seen a quality well maintained manual winch fail. On my Cape Dory 36 I had turning blocks to bring the nylon anchor line back to the main cockpit sheet winches. I could even cross the winches and have two people crank with double handed winch handles, lots of horsepower. A good capstan located in the right place can do lots of nice things from allowing you to hoist up the dinghy to hoisting a stuck anchor off the seabed. I like the Aussie open reel winches, the GX and Elite series from LoneStar Marine are at the top of my list (http://lonestarmarine.com.au/elite-vs-g ... son-guide/).
Fair winds and calm waters to you all.
Bob Jarrard
Fair winds and calm waters to you all.
Bob Jarrard