How do you suppose you do that lol, I have a 18ft sea kayak should you get out and attach at bow or stern or rig up some weird auto drop thing that you can do from the cock pit nahhh, this works perfectly fine in this use case scenario a boat is a different story.
You do that by having to connected before you leave with the rope running in the kayak and only tossing it when needed. To get it out, you simply paddle towards the anchor until you can reach the rope and pull it out
I'm a new anchor user and have a 1 5.5 feet kayak and yeah heard the same but IMO it's about current strenght. If you are just on a lake probbaly fine but yeah river maybe better behind.
@@brett4569 I assume you can just tie it off to the rear before you hop in the water and just have the actual anchor at arms reach drop it. To retrieve you can paddle a bit to it . Actually this is a great idea I wanted to avoid getting a anchor trolley and was worried about using it in the middle of my kayak.. guess I will do some testing.
You do that by using an anchor trolly. You should never attach the anchor to your kayak without a quick release or you risk flipping the craft. YT is resplendent with videos.
You tired wrong. Once it stuck, you will have to cut the line and lose the anchor. Tire the line into the bottom hole of the anchor, use zip tire to tire the line into the front hole. Just pull as hard as you can, zip tire brake and the anchor will reverse and unhooked itself.
@@MoeBergOSS nah I’ve been using this type of anchor in all sorts of lakes in many states and never had an issue in upwards of 15mph winds. You just have to have common sense on how to use it properly 😂
Great video pat nice anchor situations if you had another role I bet you could hook up the board too 😉 xx
Nice video. Nice lake. Great people. Good video
Cool!
You attached the anchor rope to the side of the boat, is that not a no no. Heard it should be attached the stern or bow of boat ?
How do you suppose you do that lol, I have a 18ft sea kayak should you get out and attach at bow or stern or rig up some weird auto drop thing that you can do from the cock pit nahhh, this works perfectly fine in this use case scenario a boat is a different story.
You do that by having to connected before you leave with the rope running in the kayak and only tossing it when needed. To get it out, you simply paddle towards the anchor until you can reach the rope and pull it out
I'm a new anchor user and have a 1 5.5 feet kayak and yeah heard the same but IMO it's about current strenght. If you are just on a lake probbaly fine but yeah river maybe better behind.
@@brett4569 I assume you can just tie it off to the rear before you hop in the water and just have the actual anchor at arms reach drop it. To retrieve you can paddle a bit to it . Actually this is a great idea I wanted to avoid getting a anchor trolley and was worried about using it in the middle of my kayak.. guess I will do some testing.
You do that by using an anchor trolly. You should never attach the anchor to your kayak without a quick release or you risk flipping the craft. YT is resplendent with videos.
Great demo, thank you!
Glad you liked it! Have a good day.
Use a bigger one on the 60 footer I run
Anchor situations
You tired wrong. Once it stuck, you will have to cut the line and lose the anchor. Tire the line into the bottom hole of the anchor, use zip tire to tire the line into the front hole. Just pull as hard as you can, zip tire brake and the anchor will reverse and unhooked itself.
Thanks for watching!
Stop talking.
@@Tenacious_SchemerWhy? Because he was right?
@@MoeBergOSS nah I’ve been using this type of anchor in all sorts of lakes in many states and never had an issue in upwards of 15mph winds. You just have to have common sense on how to use it properly 😂
Anka anka
And google translates anka anka to “duck duck” lol