PeterWright
Well-Known Member
Going back to the 50's and 60's, clinker dinghies such as the FFS and the Tideway (and many other classes) were designed to be all rounders. Stable enough to be kept on an estuary mooring for the season but light enough for trolley launching & recovery by two. Roomy enough for a family outing but perfectly capable of racing two up. Modern dinghies have become racing machines, less suited to family outings.
A Devon Yawl may be the answer, it has the advantage of being local, but at 16 ft. With a really heavy centreplate and internal ballast, rowing would be really tough going. The FFS, when new, came with rowlock sockets in the gunwales, a pair of galvanised rowlock and a pair of spruce oars.
A Devon Yawl may be the answer, it has the advantage of being local, but at 16 ft. With a really heavy centreplate and internal ballast, rowing would be really tough going. The FFS, when new, came with rowlock sockets in the gunwales, a pair of galvanised rowlock and a pair of spruce oars.