Robin
Well-Known Member
I've also been sailing since I was a toddler, but I must admit when dinghy sailing, for mobility reasons, I always chose a buoyancy aid over a life jacket and still do.
Me too, but that is not the scenario in the original post, nor is it a case of wearing a harness and safety line to avoid going overboard from a tender. It was a trip in a stable RIB between boat and shore and in a very sheltered harbour not off an exposed beach. I'm fully in favour of wearing LJs in tender trips from exposed moorings or anchorages when conditions (or the type and size of tender) justify and anyway wouldn't question the judgement of anyone wearing one by choice.
Many years ago a member of my then YC was drowned when the tender tipped over in rough conditions going ashore from an exposed mooring in Poole, another in the dinghy survived. The tender however was a 7ft or 8ft plywood pram, very tippy and worlds apart from a 10ft modern RIB in calm waters.
Perhaps the RNLI man thought they had been out to sea in the RIB rather than just going a short distance from the mooring. I would suggest if not he could have a very busy life chasing the good mooring holders of the Dart to preach to!