Picking the dink is harder than the Mother Ship
...or at least it seems that way to me.Rick, you don't offer enough info to get truly helpful comments. Will you be cruising or just sailing locally? How often will the dink need to ferry a big wad of groceries? Will it be used in rocky Maine, around SoCal's rocky/barnacle laden Channel Is., or around the Bahamas coral? How many crew need to be served? Are you a diver and will zooming off to a dive spot from the Mother Ship be a plus? How much do you actually enjoy rowing? Or sailing, for that matter. Big outboard a must...or small, light one preferred? Is the smaller price and greater longevity of a hard dink highly important to you...or relatively unimportant?When (if) considering a hard dink, don't overlook the huge difference a pair of gunwale tubes can make. I notice the Walker Bay series now offers these for some of their dinks; I inspected such a set-up at the London boat show and was very impressed. Dinghy Dogs is another brand, developed by a sailor to suit a variety of dinks. With these, you get far more stability, and they are removeable if you want to have more speed - or deflatable when stowing on deck.Jack