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Hi again, A few suggestions to mitigate the need for an anchor buoy: Tie a short (1 meter or so) line to the end of your anchor with a float and loop at the end. It floats free of a buried and tangled anchor. Then a trip line can easily be clipped on free diving or scuba. If stuck, do not hesitate to use the resources of the anchorage. Many can free dive to 25-30 feet and many will have scuba. Use an anchor that sets fast and stays put: a Spade or Rocna come first to mind while a Manson may do as well. An anchor plowing away for a distance to set or dragging in a blow is an anchor looking for trouble. Use extra scope to set your anchor quickly, then return to a chosen rode length. I carry full scuba gear, mostly for emergencies to go deep for the anchor, but which is nice for prop wraps, zinc changes, bottom cleaning and recreation as well. In many thousands, probably tens of thousands, of anchoring, I have fouled an anchor once (eventually pulled out backwards with full chain out) and never lost an anchor. I believe I do not know anyone who has lost an anchor (though I suspect I do). So, I would suggest, a fouled anchor is not common in everyday anchoring. I have come close a few times to asking someone to remove (or tie back) their anchor buoy when it has made choosing a spot to anchor more difficult. I too prefer non-overlapping circles around the anchor, but this is often not possible. The anchor buoy can be removed and the line pulled back to the boat or dropped to the bottom. I suspect the response I would receive to this request would be similar to my asking someone to sacrifice their first born child. My best to all, even those who use anchor buoys, Dick Stevenson, s/v Alchemy
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