Awesome, thank you Canso.
Yeah I was thinking before you wrote you last reply, that even if the anchor isn't hung up, it's still a bit of a pain to break the suction and get it moving out of the muck! I think next time I will try what you said and use the boat to nudge it loose first, then haul it in.
So do you always putt forward first, pulling in the extra rope, then tie off, then drive forward a bit to release the anchor? Could you just leave it tied off, start the boat, putt up river until the anchor releases, then haul it in? I was just thinking if the anchor is really stuck, you are eliminating the extra step of letting rope back out if you did it the way you normally do (drive over anchor, pull in extra rope, cleat it, then break the suction).
I know I am likely overcomplicating things, but meh, makes for interesting discussion. I am always looking to do things better esp when it comes to fishing + hunting. It's just how I roll.
Another thought, when you are letting out you anchor line do you toss the anchor over, tie off to cleat, let it hit bottom and drag until it bites, then untie off the cleat and let some more rope out and hope your anchor does not pop loose, drag bottom, and bite again (hopefully).....OR, do you toss your anchor over, let it hit bottom, and immediately feed out extra rope (3:1 ish) and THEN drift backwards until the anchor bites?
I have being doing it the 1st way, but it seems logical that the 2nd way would work better as having more rope out right from the get go will give a better angle on the anchor/chain, and possibly lead to a faster bite with the anchor, and less drift down stream before it bites down. Thoughts?