Module 3 - Anchorwork

Coastal Skipper revision outcome

Use Choosing an Anchorage as an applied Coastal Skipper decision, not just a definition list. The course outcome is that a coastal skipper can recognise the situation, choose a defensible action, and explain the check that supports it.

A paid revision product needs to build exam recall and cockpit judgement at the same time. Work this module by saying the cue, the risk, the calculation or rule if there is one, and the skipper action you would take before moving on.

Recognise

What tells me this is a Choosing an Anchorage problem?

Why it matters: Stops keyword guessing and forces context.

Apply

Which rule, calculation, symbol, or procedure changes my decision?

Why it matters: Turns memory into a skipper action.

Check

What chart, almanac, forecast, instrument, or crew factor could change the answer?

Why it matters: Builds margin and avoids brittle exam-only recall.

Decide

What would I do now, and what would make me delay or stop?

Why it matters: Connects the course to Coastal Skipper-level passage judgement.

Key points

  • Recognition cue: Shelter from wind and sea.
  • Decision cue: Adequate depth for tidal range + vessel draft.
  • Safety cue: Good holding ground (sand or mud preferred).
  • Revision standard: answer in plain English, then state the source or cross-check you would use on board.

Continue studying Anchorwork

This topic is part of Module 3. Open the full module for lessons, quizzes, flashcards, and revision tools.