I use a heavy duty vinyl dry bag. Out of the water I store two anchors & lines and two dock lines in it. On the water, the dock lines are always tied to the bow & stern, I place a smaller mushroom anchor & line at the stern and keep the larger anchor & line in the bag up front. I keep the stern anchor line wrapped up until I need it. But even after I use it, it’s not in the way when I retrieve & coil the line below the transom. I’m in salt water often, so I always rinse all the anchors, lines and the bag out at home. They dry quick in the Florida sun, then I store it all back in the bag for the next trip.Ant "neat" way to store/deploy my bow and stern anchors/line on smaller boats? Was thinking of getting like an Attwood anchor crank, but not sure if that's the right answer. Suggestions for a 14 footer?
And if you should want to slow drift across a lake baited with a shrimp for catfish, the bucket does double duty as a handy sea anchor.HI
I have one of those canvas buckets like the linemen use as tool bags. I coil the line in as the previous poster described, and the anchor and chain go in on top. Looks sufficiently nautical too.
DittoHowever I find using an anchor is becoming a rare thing as I now have spot lock on my trolling motor.
As long as it works! If I'm fishing in the boat I'm usually anchored. Pulling it up and dropping it down again in the next area by hand is a pain. A lot of times over 20' of water. A crank up system may work.m for me.... yea it's a bit kludgey but it works great.. I can from the stern.. all the way 12ft back, remotely release and retrieve my anchor.... and it's yellow cuz I stubbed my toes enough !!
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