High C easy...

veshengro

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Does anyone have an opinion, actual use of, experience of... Fender Steps?

Boarding the boat from my Dinghy, blowing a Hoolie, choppy ebb against the wind and the boat is dancing round her mooring bouy.
One foot on Dinghy thwart, hands on rail, leg over top rail...Dinghy falls away, šŸ˜...I am thinking of applying to Royal Opera for a vacancy as a High Treble.
I need a single step boost for boarding from alongside, not over the transom, and I don't want to cut the stainless rail for a boarding gate. I'm guessing a Fender step would be kinder to the topsides than a rigid ladder even a one or two step, as being battered 'tween dinghy and topside would be a regular event at my mooring.
 
I have a fender step that gets used whever anyone may have this isssue.

Its a single triangle type with one tie on point at the top. There are other types with the same or more steps that also work well. Our toerail has holes evenly spaced so easy to tie on. I'm guessing that it is the availability of solid tie-on points that makes them easy to to use or not
 
I had one like a 2 or 3 rung ladder, a long time ago now and don't remember which. It was extremely heavy and not easy to use so it soon went.

We saw one in New Zealand that we adopted. It was two wooden rungs and two small fenders with holes right through, strung onto two lines. The fenders held the rungs off the hull and the whole thing could be disassembled quickly for stowing.
 
I have a two/three step one that I like. It makes a pretty good fender in its own right when in a marina (I bought it when the boys were little) and it is good for climbing into/out of the tender.
 
The boat is an 18 foot Day Sailer so quite low freeboard which would normally make boarding easy even for a wrinkly with duff legs like me, but the previous owner had a custom made stainless pushpit made. It in fact makes the cockpit a very secure place for a small boat and with a Great Grandson who at 4 years shows Orangutang climbing abilities, I'm reluctant to alter the stainless 'cage'...:p

I was going to make a wooden hanging step but it will get hammered against the topsides if today was anything to judge by, so if the fender step works as suggested I'll be happy.

" I use a normal fender hung horizontally from the midships cleat..."

Yes, I did consider carrying something like a size 3 fender and wrapping it with non slip tape, but if a smaller step one works I'd prefer to use one.


 
I think hand holds up high are the main requirement for boarding. I use rails on cabin top but even then not high enough. (21ft boat) Perhaps hand holds up the cap shroud. Yes fender step could work well but as said you can fabricate something similar out of wood and rope. Attachment points being critical. (tricky). ol'will
 
My old triangular fender step didn’t like my weight. At a boat show I spoke to some guys from Scotland who had a different design that spreads the load more effectively. It works really well. Now what was the company name….Aha! I found them. 1 x Boarding Fender: 45cm x 12cm
 
Thanks for that VYV, if I find the single fender step doesn't work, I'll copy your idea and rig it so that the top step is just slightly higher than the Dinghy thwart when I am alongside.(y)
 
I have a single fender step which we bought years ago on our first trip to Holland when we spotted it in a local chandlery. I notice you can get two step versions. Excellent kit.
 
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