Hi Sarge,
We use some chaffe protection (old fire hose) on the line when conditions warrant. I was surprised with the whole no chalks situation, but it hasn't been a problem to this point. With two anchors out, we run the primary (on the windlass) out the anchor roller and attach the chaffe protection there; then run the second off the side a bit, through the bow rail. Both tied to the bow cleat. Different locations require different techniques, as we learned at Lake Powell... we also carry extra line onboard for tying off to shore in those situations. Again, depending on the location/situation, we prefer to anchor out. Nothing unusual about anchoring the CD, but being a relatively light boat with plenty of windage, it wants to sail around a bit at anchor. You can minimize this by setting a second anchor (bow or stern, depending on the situation), or tying a rolling hitch on your primary and tying that line off to a stern cleat. Most times we find that the movement isn't uncomfortable (actually relaxing usually)... it just depends on how tight the anchorage is or how others there are anchored. We make it a point to try to find shallow, protected water for anchoring.
Joking aside (about keeping the Blonde up to keep an eye on the set), we want to be secure on the hook. Who doesn't? Use the sounder to get a feel for the bottom, use plenty of rode, chain is your friend, a good anchor, back down on it to be sure you are set, pay attention to tide and weather, pick your anchoring spot, and ask others who are already anchored (they don't want you to drag in the middle of the night, either :wink: ). Goodness knows you could wind up dragging down on some naked guy in the middle of the night, but I'll let Dixie tell you about that.
Are we going to see you at Bellingham? From the sounds of it, there will be lots of folks (and opinions)... I just love good local knowledge.
Best wishes,
Jim B.