One of the best things I ever did to outfit my canoe was to install an anchor system. I run a thin small rope through a couple fairleads (small plastic tubes to guide rope), which I mounted under my thwarts/yoke and the front seat, then under the gunwales and out through a hole I drilled just uner my bow deck and through my stem (I have a home made cedar strip Winisk). I epoxied in a small brass tube with th eedges peened over through the hole. I then added a clam cleat to the front edge of my seat thwart. The clam cleat will instantly grab your rope to 'tie' it off, but instantly releases when you lift the rope. So when I am set up for fshing etc. I run my anchor line through the clam cleat, then through the fairleads and out through th e brass tube in the bow. I then add a nylon stuff sack, which I fill with sand or small pebbles etc if its a rocky, sand free shoreline. The sand works great and does not ding up the bow as a dangling rock might. With the anchor coming straight off the bow, you reduce the yawing from side to side with the canoe, and it much more drag resistant to wind. Also, so easy to do it myself from the stern, no need for the bow paddler to do anything. We can easily work down a shoreline by just lifting the anchor for a few seconds, drifting downwind, then dropping the anchor. It has worked really well.
Moonman.