Daydream believer
Well-Known Member
This is for yachties rather than mobos
A comment about preventing swimmers from getting aboard one's boat via the sugar scoop had me wondering.
I see a lot of videos where people take their tender up to the stern then walk down the middle of the tender & step from the bow to the sugar scoop.
Not holding on. Just relying on balance.
I see some on our moorings who bring their tender broadside to the stern, against the tide, & get aboard via the boarding ladder.
It seems to me that both options are dangerous. A friend of mine fell last year whilst boarding his 41 ft Jeneau & broke 2 ribs because he insisted on getting aboard via the stern. Slipped & damage done.
Surely the safest way is to come alongside the shrouds & use them to hold on, high up, to pull one's self on to the side deck. The dinghy can be secured fore & aft quickly enough I have a step that hangs over the side, so that I can stand on the step. Then I am independant of the dinghy. It breaks the overall step up into 2 parts
What I do not do, is try to get in next to the cockpit & heave upwards on the guardrail where my C of G is high up and a sudden roll of the boat could swing me back. Plus it puts unnecessary strain on the staunchions
How do others do it?
A comment about preventing swimmers from getting aboard one's boat via the sugar scoop had me wondering.
I see a lot of videos where people take their tender up to the stern then walk down the middle of the tender & step from the bow to the sugar scoop.
Not holding on. Just relying on balance.
I see some on our moorings who bring their tender broadside to the stern, against the tide, & get aboard via the boarding ladder.
It seems to me that both options are dangerous. A friend of mine fell last year whilst boarding his 41 ft Jeneau & broke 2 ribs because he insisted on getting aboard via the stern. Slipped & damage done.
Surely the safest way is to come alongside the shrouds & use them to hold on, high up, to pull one's self on to the side deck. The dinghy can be secured fore & aft quickly enough I have a step that hangs over the side, so that I can stand on the step. Then I am independant of the dinghy. It breaks the overall step up into 2 parts
What I do not do, is try to get in next to the cockpit & heave upwards on the guardrail where my C of G is high up and a sudden roll of the boat could swing me back. Plus it puts unnecessary strain on the staunchions
How do others do it?



