Towing a rigid dinghy

Re: Live and don't learn

I could have done with a ready-to-use dinghy a few weeks ago.

I had to leave a marina berth in a to make way for its permanent user and there was a current from astern and a breeze from the port side. This, combined with prop kick to port soon had me sideways on to the sterns of some adjacent boats.

I should have run a kedge out astern and I did think of doing so, but being in a bit of a hurry and not wanting to spend time getting the inflatable out, I took a risk, and paid the inevitable price. Fortunately no damage, apart from a red face. :o

If I'd had a rigid dinghy handy I could have sculled out with the kedge in a few minutes and everything would have been alright.


I sympathise - in those situations I have known people run a line across marinas and / or channels to warp the boat out - just as Francis Drake did against the Armada - sod any incomers, they can stand off - this made me cringe with embarassment but the owner may have been right; sometimes one has to put one's own boat first.
 
Re: Live and don't learn

I sympathise - in those situations I have known people run a line across marinas and / or channels to warp the boat out ...

That's just how I got out of Port Bannatyne marina a couple of weeks ago. It helps to have a small, keen crew member in a rowing dinghy to take warps across and collect them afterwards. Last year I warped out of Ardfern once.
 
Re: Live and don't learn

I switched to a rigid dinghy a few years ago after an incident where the motor on the rubber duck lost its prop and I couldn't row to windward with the silly short oars. I don't have to tow it because I have room to lift an 11' dinghy on davits but on the occasions I have it is no problem. I have 2 bits of advice for anyone considering it:

a) have a stout towing eye bolted through to a substantial backing pad, low down on the stem or bow transom so as to lift the bow of the dinghy when the painter comes taut suddenly.

b) If the dinghy doesn't have a skeg, fit one. It reduces sheering about.

My Mirror-style dinghy doesn't have a skeg because I removed it to make room for a wheelbarrow wheel. If the wheel isn't in place it veers about like a saucer.

The one disadvantage of a rigid dinghy compared to a flubber is it's much harder to board when swimming.
 
... neither of the dinghies I tow, a clinker-effect pram and a Heyland Toad, gives the slightest problem. ...

I'm going to have to eat my words on that. Yesterday, after coming through Sanda Sound, the Heyland Toad swamped. I got it alongside, where it capsized, so I couldn't empty it. Progress was restricted to a slow crawl, because at any significant speed the drag on that side had us going in circles.

Luckily the Campbeltown lifeboats (ALB and ILB) were on exercise in the area and they very kindly helped us. We cast the dinghy adrift and the ALB crew caught it, lifted and emptied it with their crane, and took it to Campbeltown, where we were headed. No damage, save some antifouling scuffed from yacht to dinghy and a lost praddle.

I'm going to modify my advice in future: towing a rigid dinghy is fine as long as it's the right dinghy. My usual one, the pram, has never taken more than a bailerful of water aboard, almost certainly because it sits much higher out of the water than the Heyland.
 
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having her there and ready to roll has changed my attitude towards anchoring out because the shore is only two steps away - one down into the dinghy and another from the dinghy to the shore. The dinghy rows brilliantly so the outboard has slumbered quietly in the quarter berth while we get some modsest excerciseroqing . Of an evening I often take the camer and the dog for a bit of a row.

I quite often tow an 8ft clinker pram. Have done for many years, with only one occasion when there was a bit of a problem. I usually leave the cover over the forward part of the dinghy to make sure she doesn't get too much spray on board. The daggerboard slot has to be blocked as well, or water splashes up inside it.

The really great thing is the sailing rig. A quiet row around the creek in the evening is good and a quiet sail is even better. Indeed, I have often used her as a sailing tender when going ashore - sailing on the reach or run and rowing when it's a headwind. Lovely. :)
 
Re: Live and don't learn

We've just started towing our inflatable about the place, rather than packing it away. It tows really nicely too (as long as the outboard is off), which is probably down to its air deck and inflatable keel. Much easier to get up the beach than a clinker.

I used to tow my airdeck inflatable but........no longer. I think you will find that on a windy day it flips and spins.

Maybe, but it seemed pretty stable in 25-30 knots of breeze the other week.

I never tow an inflatable where I sail as we are prone to sudden, katabatic winds of great intensity that will have you towing an airborne kite.

I documented one experience - the only one - when I left the outboard on while moored to a buoy here.
 
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