Cannibal
On Sun, 30 Jan 2011 00:51:21 +0000, Justin C
wrote:
In article , Jessica B wrote:
Ok, but wouldn't it be more convenient to just keep them out of harms
way in the dinghy if you can?
A dinghy can flip, and an inflatable, in a strong breeze can become a
kite, then you lose everything that's in it, thwart and all.
Twart? Isn't that across something?
Don't people put their whole dinghy on
their boats?
Yeah, but they're heavy (or can be) and damn difficult to handle -
there's not a lot of room on most boats what with masts, shrouds, and
spinnaker poles. If you're only going a few miles, and the conditions
are OK then it's just easier to tow. I would never tow one far, there's
drag, wear and tear on both your boat and dink... I've heard of some
people towing to arrive at their destination and look to the dink and
find it not there!
Justin.
I've seen boats that have these elbow-shaped tubes on the back that
have like a cradle/pulley system for dinghies. I guess you have to tie
them off so they don't bang around, but at least you aren't towing
them.
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