yukonbob wrote:It is said (and documented) that a boat on a sea anchor deployed from the bow will shear (wander) much worse than at anchor. Considering the amount of shearing these boats experience on the hook I can't imagine what they'd do one bow deployed sea anchor in a blow. I've been reading more into drogues and sea anchors and all signs point to a series drogue. The more I read into it the more I've been convinced that the stern is the way to go.
Trust me, in 20 foot breaking sea you do not want your stern into the waves. Shear effect is created when a boat is on a fixed anchor and the boat 'dances' back and forth in the wind like a flag fluttering back and forth on a flagpole. Eliminate the flagpole and the flag will just fly with the wind. A sea anchor is not attached to the ground - it moves quite easily so when the boat pulls on it the anchor moves. You control shear by properly sizing the sea anchor and by increasing the length of the line, not by putting your stern into the waves and getting swamped.
Stern anchors work very well on the MAC M boat - I have have great luck with them if you use a bridle, but only in bad chop and nothing over 6 feet. On really big stuff you must steer the boat or tie off the bow.
You are very correct about doubting one anchor - in a very bad storm with no one at the helm multiple sea anchors or baggers were what I saw used by the guys I sailed with - they had several buckets on one line. Ultimately, the sea anchor does not save your boat - it only makes things more comfortable, If the boat is not sea worthy in heavy storms no sea anchor will save it. I have weathered bad things in similar sized sailboats with experienced skippers but have yet to test a MAC in 30 foot sea. We just lot a boat this morning off San Clemente Island here in San Diego because of high seas. Usually boats get swamped. If you can keep your MAC from getting swamped (and I think you can) then you will survive.

