Hello Cadanski
Is it soft mud on your drying mooring?
What I do is wind a further 6 turns after the cables go slack, that should give you 1 inch of free cable, and just go sailing. The rougher the sea the quicker the silt will wash out from the bottom as the keel will tend to wiggle from side to side and forward and backward.
After a while check the slack to see if the keel has dropped some more. If all the slack has gone wind another 6 turns to slacken a bit more and carry on sailing. etc.
If the slack is not taken up this way then you may need to take the keel out to check what is wrong when you next lay up.
I would not overwind to much slack as the keel could drop quite suddenly with a thump, scares the life out of me, it is just like running aground on hard bottom when this happened once.
My keel on Aztec has 150 turns to fully down. I suppose all 28's are the same?
Now I have an electric motor driving my keel it is not easy to tell when the cables go slack, slight disadvantage but overridden by the luxury of having a push button to operate the keel from the cockpit.
Mike Edwards
Seal 28 "Aztec"
Mike Edwards
Seal 28 "Aztec"