IMHO, boaters have an easier time boarding and off-boarding the dinks if the dinks are brought up alongside, where one uses a life-line gate, rather than the stern gate, to access the deck. Just as if you were boarding (i.e., stepping up) from the dock. The resultant motion vector (for lack of a better term
) is much more vertical. Plus, there is nothing in the way such as a backstay, wheel, captain’s seat, and crew sitting around the cockpit. Do not need assist from the boat’s skipper. This usually requires a step hanging from the gunwale. Secure the painter to the midship cleat, and pass a stern line around one of the stanchions aft to help hold the dink in close. One step up, and you’re on the deck. The so-called “fender step” works well for this. If you have groceries, or other, to bring aboard, a one-arm lift up through the gate while you hold the gate stanchion works fast. Our days of “crawling up the (reverse) transom” trying to use the swim step or whatever for general boarding are thankfully over. We’re now especially reluctant to board a friend’s boat where you might actually have to swing a leg over the stern rail, as there is no gate at all. As in some older models.
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