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Shorthanded Cruising

Anchoring solo after sundown
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I have a dodger. I simply stand up and I can see over it. It's not really an issue.

Good idea about going as slow as you have to, I'll try to remember that.

I have a big LED flashlight with two settings and use the bright setting while still far out and the low setting when in the anchorage.  I try to keep the light on for only a few seconds to get snapshots of the area.

My boat is free of dodgers and enclosures so I have great visibility from the cockpit.  Would be interested in hearing what people do when they have a big dodger up front.

RE avoiding the bottom, I have a handheld Garmin 78 GPS that I can hold right up to my nose on a rainy night.  It has guided me into several new little creeks in the dark, brought me right up to unlit daymarks at the entrance, and through the shallow areas with accurate depths.  The charts are incredible on these things, we are really spoiled!

For sure, entering a new anchorage at night can cause disorientation even with a plotter. In familiar anchorages we often get our bearings from familiar lights on shore. In a new anchorage, you don't have those familiar guide posts.
Regarding whether to preserve night vision or use a search light, the answer is- "sort of both."

When using the search light but try not to let the beam hit the mast or deck. The reflected light will ruin your night vision. Keep the beam out over the water so that only objects on the water reflect back. I really try to work with the ambient light though, looking for "contrast" on the water's surface. An overcast sky or a new moon can make that difficult though. Keep a hand near the shifter so that you can drop into neutral quickly if you spot a crab pot at the last second or hear one bumping along the hull.

As always, speed is a factor. Don't let fatigue push you into rushing into an anchorage in your desire to put the hook down and go to sleep. Go as slow as you have to, for as long as you have to. 

You can practice by picking a nearby anchorage that you know is well marked and sailing there in the evening instead of daytime. Sometimes when cruising during a summer heat wave, I've opted to travel at night to spare myself the brutal heat and so I've arrived at night.

Both, I guess. I can maneuver with the chartplotter, so I’m not too worried about running aground. Other boats which are unlit, crab pots, etc., are more of a concern. Best to be lights out and eyes dark adapted, or looking about with a strong flashlight?

Are you concerned more about safely navigating and running aground or are you more concerned about staying clear of other boats in the anchorage?

I am working up to sailing further and further solo. Soon, I will get to the point where I will arrive at an anchorage after sundown, perhaps in full darkness. OK, what advice do you have on how to perform anchoring in those conditions safely?


I know I must work up to overnight sailing solo, but that will be later. Maybe sooner, maybe much later.

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