There is a down side ...
Hair.I lived aboard for 5 years with 2 dogs. Dog hair and bilge pumps do not get along.Early on, one of my dogs decided that beating up SF Bay in 20+ was not a good deal and jumped ship ... didn't fall off ... jumped, and headed for shore (about 1.5 M). Dogs are very hard to spot in whitecaps. I got to practice my Crew Overboard skills as the dog came to the awful realization that swimming in SF Bay was a bad choice.I got her attention on the first pass and got her alongside on the second pass. She was on the leeward side of the cockpit. When I grabbed her collar and she got one paw on the rail, she flat levitated herself back on the boat. There was no need for any find of harness to get all 55# of her back into the cockpit. If I hadn't been in such a panic to get her back, it would have been comic.Since that one time, she was quite content to sail and stayed below when the water was rough. On calm days and downwind, she kept me company on deck.The other dog was much smaller, and she liked to hang out on the bowsprit ... giving Wench a heart attack.In 5 years my girls never soiled the dock, and never barked at folk when I was topside.Sadly, the girls have sailed on, one at 17 the other was 19. Now I have two more ... a older rescue mutt that is okay but not thrilled sailing and ... a Yorkshire Terrorist ... er Terrier ... I'm not at all sure that there is anything inside the Yorkie's head to train ... He's a yappy little bugger and I will not allow him spoil other peoples sailing, if I cannot control the yap factor, he will never see a marina. He just turned 1 and has been out with me in the dink and sailing once or twice, there may be some hope ... but I have my doubts ... cute as a button and just as dumb.

I have to agree with Liam, there is no excuse for yappy, ill-mannered, untrained kids or dogs in a marina. If they cannot train and control a dog or a child, any bets that they aren't very good sailors either? (that's my rant)
