B27
Well-Known Member
There are many dinghies available.
Personally I would suggest from having sailed in Chi Harbour, there is a lot of tide, you will be going against it at times, so there is an advantage in a faster boat. More so in light winds!
I'd also suggest sticking to conventional bermudan rig, avoid any retro/brown-sails/gaffer stuff unless you really really want that. Because 2/3 of your time you might be going up wind, and the ordinary dinghy rig is best for that, in general.
A Mirror is a fine boat for two kids or one kid one adult, but for two adults it is small and cramped.
I hesitate to recommend any particular boat.
Because there are dozens of classes/designs to choose from.
A lot of cheap boats are quite old, so choose carefully on condition vs price vs work needed.
Also, some boats are more likely to tip beginners in the water than others.
There is the Andrew Simpson place on the Eastern Road in Portsmouth, they might do some 'have go days'?
Personally I would suggest from having sailed in Chi Harbour, there is a lot of tide, you will be going against it at times, so there is an advantage in a faster boat. More so in light winds!
I'd also suggest sticking to conventional bermudan rig, avoid any retro/brown-sails/gaffer stuff unless you really really want that. Because 2/3 of your time you might be going up wind, and the ordinary dinghy rig is best for that, in general.
A Mirror is a fine boat for two kids or one kid one adult, but for two adults it is small and cramped.
I hesitate to recommend any particular boat.
Because there are dozens of classes/designs to choose from.
A lot of cheap boats are quite old, so choose carefully on condition vs price vs work needed.
Also, some boats are more likely to tip beginners in the water than others.
There is the Andrew Simpson place on the Eastern Road in Portsmouth, they might do some 'have go days'?

