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tips on mooring off of shore

I believe I agree with both sides here. The box is heavy (for its size), but is much more of a 'fire and forget' tool. No chain to mess with and excellent in sand. The Danforth is lighter and takes some skill to do, but is very reliable when used correctly (and I think ultimately better for max hold). Both good options, depending upon your skill and conditions.
 
For the shallow sandy bottom I opted to make one my self...

https://jetboaters.net/threads/d-i-y-auger-anchor.4290/


cool, I will check this out.

@MattFX4. How much chain do you have on your anchor line? You need enough to keep the anchor laying flat on the bottom so it will bite in. You also need enough scope (length of line payed out) which will depend on water depth, wind condo tins and bottom conditions. After throwing the anchor out do you go in reverse to set the anchor?

The Danforth is a good all around anchor. Are the flukes on your anchor real loose. If not they won't dig in very easily. I had to throw out the one that came with my boat as the flukes were very stiff and wouldn't bite in.

The screw in anchor you are considering would not be a good choice for several reasons. The boat would have a lot of leverage in pulling that anchor out of a sandy bottom, especially in windy and choppy conditions. That anchor would also be much more difficult to store on your boat, setting it usually requires getting wet and you run some risk of injuring your passengers or vinyl seats while handling a 5 foot anchor on a pitching deck. The box anchor is an option but storing and deploying are also issues. I would consider a properly working, properly set up Danforth as the best all around choice as far as ease of deployment, effecacy and storage with the box anchor as a good second choice or back up anchor.

I think my anchor has 2 to 3' of chain. I watched a few videos earlier, and I was going at it all wrong. Next time I will try to drop anchor a good ways off shore then back in towards the shore to try to set the anchor. Then maybe tie the stern off to something on the shore and allow the boat to float in knee deep water. Thanks for the input everyone.
 
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