dylanwinter
Well-Known Member
I have been towing Sweet Pea - 9 foot long similated clinker - for over 300 miles now and so far it has been marvelous. Until now my towing experience has been clouded by dragging an inflatable around - chalk and cheese. Towing a flubber is a sorry thing to do as it zig zags and surfs
The little clinker dinghy tows like a dream and has never come anywhere near to being capsized by wakes or waves. It tows straight and true under both power and sail and has never threatened to overtake the mother ship. She has a floating painter around 40 foot long and seems happier on a long line. I have come to rather like the noise it makes as it follows us around Scotland.
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.
She sails pretty well using an optimist rig and a steering oar
the fendering is a bit extreme but the fenders mean that I can bump her around and not worry about damaging things she might hit. The fenders also offer some good resistance to capsize and also means that shouldnshe swamp she will float high enough in the water for me to stand up and wave and also stand and paddle with one oar. Not done a floatation test with two adults and a dog.
the dinghy came from a Solent Forumite (£100) who tolfd me that she is from a mold taken from a local keyhaven tender.
I am now a great fan of clinker and its impact on directional and rolling stability
D
journey so far
The little clinker dinghy tows like a dream and has never come anywhere near to being capsized by wakes or waves. It tows straight and true under both power and sail and has never threatened to overtake the mother ship. She has a floating painter around 40 foot long and seems happier on a long line. I have come to rather like the noise it makes as it follows us around Scotland.
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.
She sails pretty well using an optimist rig and a steering oar
the fendering is a bit extreme but the fenders mean that I can bump her around and not worry about damaging things she might hit. The fenders also offer some good resistance to capsize and also means that shouldnshe swamp she will float high enough in the water for me to stand up and wave and also stand and paddle with one oar. Not done a floatation test with two adults and a dog.
the dinghy came from a Solent Forumite (£100) who tolfd me that she is from a mold taken from a local keyhaven tender.
I am now a great fan of clinker and its impact on directional and rolling stability
D
journey so far