That makes sense Larry, thanks!  --Craig

----- Original Message -----
From: "Larry Yake" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, March 28, 2004 11:52 PM
Subject: Inflatable Dinghy's

If you're in a tidal area, you'd much rather drag a dingy back down the
beach than a high and dry M15!

On Sun, 28 Mar 2004 22:17:27 -0500 "Honshells" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
writes:

Do some M15 sailors keep them on moorings?  I'm just curious, b/c
otherwise an M15 can go anwhere a dinghy can
go, provided you don't mind getting your ankles a little wet to get
to the beach, which is going to happen
with a lot of dinghies anyway.

I'm not knocking this thread, I'm honestly curious (???) . . .

----- Original Message -----
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, March 28, 2004 8:34 PM
Subject: Inflatable Dinghy's

Hi Gang,

I have gone the whole route:

My original dinghy was a 9 foot round bottomed boat with sails and
a
dagger board.

Pluses: it was large, and held the whole family - wife plus two
children
and gear; it was fun to sail; but.............

I couldn't put it on board, if things got dicey.

Next attempt:  an Avon 7' inflatable.  A neighbor sold it to me.

Yes, you could store it down below, but:...............it took
forever to
inflate and deflate.
It would only work with an outboard................  Forget rowing.
The
position was wrong; the oars were too short; and if you had to row
against a 15 knot wind to get back to your boat, then the outboard
had
better work, or else you were going nowhere..

My outboard wasn't reliable!

Next stop:

I got a 7'-9" low freeboard Dwyer dinghy at a Tag Sale - cheap.
Rebuilt
the whole gunwale.  Tried it.  Rows great.  Fits on board.
But...............with three of four people in the dinghy, the
freeboard
become so low that you become a submarine - or fervently hope you
don't
become a submarine.

Next attempt:

The regular 7'-9" Dwyer dinghy.  Wholly satisfactory except:
................... if I sat in the stern operating  the outboard,
and my
wife sat in the bow to balance the boat, and we hit a
wave...................the splash drenched her back.  She was NOT
HAPPY.

So, solution to problem:

I built a "dodger" for the bow of the dinghy.  Folded flat for
storage,
but in use, kept my wife dry, no matter what sort of wake we were
crossing.  Success!

For my M15 I built a Bolger NYMPH  7'-9" dinghy.  It is light
weight.  I
can put it on the roof rack of my car.

It rows well.  It is fun.

.............and that's where I am today.  A Bolger NYMPH dinghy to
go
with my M15.

Connie




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