Interesting & informative discussion. We inherited a 10kg/22 lb Bruce (genuine "Made In Belgium" Bruce, not a generic claw clone) with 26 feet of 3/8th chain plus 1/2" nylon rode for total of 210 feet mounted on a bowsprit/roller as primary ground tackle on our A25.
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Our secondary anchor is an 18 lb painted steel Danforth type, with 6 feet of chain & 125 feet of rode, which we stow in the aft cabin. So far we have not had any significant incidents, but it's good to know the limitations of these types. When anchoring overnight on our lake we generally use both anchors bow and stern to hold us in place facing North, since most times the afternoon breezes are out of the South, but inevitably overnight the winds shift 180 degrees as 10 to 12 knot downslope winds sliding off a 6,000 foot mountain range to the North kick up starting late at night to early morning. Partially this is because while we could swing and reset on one anchor, this lake was enlarged with a new dam in the 1990s, submerging many mesquite and palo verde trees in the coves, the remnants of which tend to snag and wrap the anchor chains in 20 to 30 feet of water, which means only a scuba diver could recover it. Many of our friends have lost anchors in this lake. Fortunately I've only ever lost one Danforth style anchor in 19 years of sailing/boating on this lake. Losing a Rochna to a chain getting wrapped around a submerged tree stump could get real expensive.
Desert lake cove anchoring
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We're going over to Catalina Island in a few weeks, but there one goes on moorings locked in bow and stern, due to the crowded nature of the harbors and steep, rocky shore.
Here's how crowded it gets in summer in Avalon, in this picture taken in 2012 with our old Catalina 25 sailboat "Orinoco Flow" in the center foreground.
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But if anchor replacement becomes a future issue, for example if we were to lose our anchor to a snag or rock on the lake, which is common and easy to do, then one of these more modern anchors would be our choice, either Rochna, Manson, or Mantus.
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