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Sea Anchors...what do you have/like?
Been on board a couple boats with different brands and think I am going to pick up a Fiorentino this winter. These anchors are great offshore and make it a hell of a lot more comfortable and provide a fall back in case of heavy weather.
I had a cheap no-name brand I picked up on ebay and let me tell you don't use them. In rough weather it will blow apart, even on a small boat. It is amazing how hard the pull is on them. The Fiorentinos look pretty rugged and I think I will go one size up just to never have to worry about it. What do you have on your boat? |
1 size bigger that what is rated for my boat, I also drift with a front and back line so I can adjust the drift with the current and the wind to be best
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I have a b52 ejection seat drouge it's 7 feet accross and strong as heck.
Got it on eBay for about 50 bucks.Well worth it my boat drifts side to and with the tower it rolls awfull in a big sea. Over the winter I'm installing a cleat in the middle of the stern so I don't have to bridle both stern cleats to get it strait off the back. Can't see spending the 800 bucks for a paratech. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
I had the biggest sea anchor I could find when I had my Parker.
The downeast, not necessary :rotf2: |
I ordered this
www.alltackle.com: Canyon Sea Anchor 46 inch about a month ago, they said it would show up about mid-january. |
I got the biggest one they had from Cabelas several years ago.
Still going strong, but again, my boat don't weight what yours does. Works great for bottom fishing--slow drift-- |
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One rough night offshore spend without it will change your mind. All boats need one to go bow into the seas (or need to tie up to a pot which is really not recommended) I've used the paratech, they are nice and simple and pretty heavy duty. Why would you want to go stern first into the seas? I was going to get the paratech but I think the fiorentino I think is even better. Both systems have a simple bag set-up. you literally just toss the entire thing in the water and walk away and there is a great retrieval set up that allows it to be retrieved by one person in heavy weather with ease. I am mainly getting one for laying over at night and in case of a breakdown or get thru some heavy weather and course to set up for chunking and lastly to controlling drift speed while bottom fishing |
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Even when it's really rough. If it's over 4-6 footers I'll anchor Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
I also have one from Cabela's , I hate to say it. Had a standard issue sea anchor, from a reputable company. Opening consistantly was always an issue. I'ld be done with the drift before the freikin umbrella would open correct. The Cabela's is the only one that I know of that has a float on one side and weights on the bottom. This enables the umbrella to open correct each time. Its just not a problem. No real fuss at all.
For drift mainemaince in big wind its great. Its also a tremendous saftey tool. Pay more for the Cabela's product. As stated above, go slightly above the size recommeded. |
I just got an idea..........from pmuellers post.....
I have some small sea anchors I use for slow trolling and yes once in a while they don't open on there own and you have to play with it. But.......if I put some floats on one side and weights on the other that will solve that problem everytime :love: |
sea anchors kick ass, my buddy uses one similar to the one typhoon lists.
They're pissa, I can't say enough how much better they make fishing on a windy day. And as much as I like to cheap out and use 5 gallon buckets for everything, the actual sea anchors work 10x better. |
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