Arthritis and inflatables

reginaldon

Well-Known Member
Joined
20 Feb 2004
Messages
3,538
Location
kent
Visit site
What with advancing years and arthritic knees, I have problems boarding my inflatable to get out to the mooring - I'm very loath to pack in this sailing lark - any advice would be welcomed.
OK - Go to a marina, I'm a bit too tight to go from a £300+ mooring to a £2000+ marina. and Dover can be a difficult entry for a Caprice due to the tides.
 
Last edited:
What with advancing years and arthritic knees, I have problems boarding my inflatable to get out to the mooring - I'm very loath to pack in this sailing lark - any advice would be welcomed.
OK - Go to a marina, I'm a bit too tight to go from a £300+ mooring to a £2000+ marina.

Did you consider something like a Tabur Yak III rigid dinghy? It has a catamaran type hull and is very stable.

I second the suggestion for glucosamine tablets.
 
Did you consider something like a Tabur Yak III rigid dinghy? It has a catamaran type hull and is very stable.

I second the suggestion for glucosamine tablets.

I have the tablets and have considered that dinghy - could go down that route. Of course jumping into an inflatable was not a problem five years ago!
 
Some places/clubs offer a water-taxi service which might make things easier. Queenborough used to when I moored there.

Alternatively, how about a pontoon-accessible mud-berth at, say, Conyer or Hoo? Very suitable for a Caprice. Cost midway between a mooring and a deep-water marina.
 
Some places/clubs offer a water-taxi service which might make things easier. Queenborough used to when I moored there.

Alternatively, how about a pontoon-accessible mud-berth at, say, Conyer or Hoo? Very suitable for a Caprice. Cost midway between a mooring and a deep-water marina.

Thanks, but I'm on the S coast of Kent., I brought my boat round from Oare Creek because I had no tidal window there,
apart from that it was good!

Re Tabur Yak type dinghy - no room in Yacht Club store for those and no water taxi - I'm an awkward cus!
I only live 800 yds from the harbour here.

Of course I could board her at low tide and wait for the tide to come in, but as an almost full time carer, I can only grab a couple of hours occasionally when the tide is right - I'm on a half tide mooring.
 
Last edited:
Why are you having problems with getting into the infatable that you think a different dinghy may solve?

The inflatable is nice and soft and is quite forgiving in many respects, I have an Avon and a grp dingy....I almost always use the Avon....much kinder on the Knees !

PS: I met up with 'Daft Willie'....Mad Frankies brother last week....nice bloke!
 
I have the tablets and have considered that dinghy - could go down that route. Of course jumping into an inflatable was not a problem five years ago!

Last summer I was on the side of a slimy slipway and had to get into the dinghy. Rather than put my bottom on this i decided to drop into it.

I landed in the back and my daughter who was in the front was catapulted out. On landing I rebounded out the other side and into the harbour, all to the amusement of the passengers of the ferry just beside us.

The shame of it....!!!
 
What with advancing years and arthritic knees, I have problems boarding my inflatable to get out to the mooring - I'm very loath to pack in this sailing lark - any advice would be welcomed.

This could help: (and yes I have a vested interest)

http://www.geoderm.co.uk/ourshop/prod_1960409-ALOE-VERA-PAIN-GEL-COLD-HOT-Frio-Calor-110mls.html

and just to show a level of fairness and advice; there is another product that I've heard is recommended.

http://www.maverix.org/brands/O24.html

On this one in UK do NOT buy from any other source; there was, and still is, a major financial scam (negative option billing if you understand the term) with way out of date products that have lost their potency.
 
Cod liver oil and glucosamine tablets !
May be a drift from the OP, but many years ago I developed arthritis in my index finger. Doctor told me to stop my daily breakfast orange juice and change to pineapple juice. MAGIC, cured me in days, and if I miss-out the pineapple for a week or so (away on holiday etc) finger stiffens up.
I've recommended this to a number of people and had positive feed-back froma few of them.
Worth a try, cheaper than a marina!!
 
Last summer I was on the side of a slimy slipway and had to get into the dinghy. Rather than put my bottom on this i decided to drop into it.

I landed in the back and my daughter who was in the front was catapulted out. On landing I rebounded out the other side and into the harbour, all to the amusement of the passengers of the ferry just beside us.

The shame of it....!!!

Look out for yourselves on You Have Been Framed!

Mike.
 
Thanks folks for all your contributions, which I'm carefully considering & may well take some on board.
I'm fortunate, altho' an octogenarian I have scarcely any pain, but the problem is boarding the inflatable with it bobbing around - I find it difficult coping with the changing angles and I try to drop down asap, getting out is quite a trial also, so different three or four years ago, even though it was around then.

Sybarite, was it Gallic humour at the expense of their Anglo Saxon guests?
 
Last edited:
Thanks folks for all your contributions, which I'm carefully considering & may well take some on board.
I'm fortunate, altho' an octogenarian I have scarcely any pain, but the problem is boarding the inflatable with it bobbing around - I find it difficult coping with the changing angles and I try to drop down asap, getting out is quite a trial also, so different three or four years ago, even though it was around then.

Sybarite, was it Gallic humour at the expense of their Anglo Saxon guests?

Have you tried an inflatable floor, stiffens up the dinghy no end.
 
Thanks folks for all your contributions, which I'm carefully considering & may well take some on board.
I'm fortunate, altho' an octogenarian I have scarcely any pain, but the problem is boarding the inflatable with it bobbing around - I find it difficult coping with the changing angles and I try to drop down asap, getting out is quite a trial also, so different three or four years ago, even though it was around then.

Sybarite, was it Gallic humour at the expense of their Anglo Saxon guests?

The honest truth Reg - as Swmbo never tires of reminding me. She was in the middle and as a horse rider stayed in the saddle!
 
The honest truth Reg - as Swmbo never tires of reminding me. She was in the middle and as a horse rider stayed in the saddle!

Phew that's hard!
Incidentally on my last outing, getting out of the inflatable at the slipway, I ended up going for a little swim
to public acclaim!
 
Last edited:
Top