Walker Bay 8
The solution to this problem (and it is a real tough one) depends on the kind of sailing you are going to do.We have a walker Bay 8 with tubes (the RID), a 2HP Honda 4 stroke and a sail kit. When we are sailing locally among our islands it is the best solution - even though we have to tow it. It can't be beat for gunkholing as you don't have to worry about barnacle covered rocks. And sailing it can provide hours of fun on a summer afternoon. It is a pretty effective "lifeboat" for coastal fair weather emergencies. The small 4 stroke moves it along well and economically and the engine can be mounted on the curved back of the pushpit seats if you jigger one of those small plastic engine support plates slightly. It is only 28 lbs and you can lift it with one hand to get it in the dink.I tow it on a "Y" bridle. One side, connected to the port mooring cleat, ends in a shackle (at the junction of the "Y") through which the tow is passed and cleated to the starboard mooring cleat. This makes it easy to adjust the length of the tow under different conditions yet keeps the dink centred.I find it causes much less drag than an inflatable and because it has a keel it tracks true. I sacrifice about half a knot under power and a bit more under most sailing conditions. Oddly enough the drag is least when it is pulled up very close to the boat - so much for the "tow it on the second wave" theory.I would not want to tow this dinghy under severe conditions - power or sail. So we have a small roll-up inflatable that we use for longer trips and leave the RID at the dock. The RID fits on the foredeck ahead of the mast - although it would require a proper cradle for extended use there. Again I wouldn't want to have it there in bad weather, and it would make an emergency anchor drop almost impossible.Davits at the back would work. These would be better with an inflatable with straight sides - the RID has curved gunwales and makes the positioning of supports a challenge. The problem for me with this is that it obscures rear vision, makes the stern step unusable, makes the deployment of MOB pole etc more difficult and, the killer, extends the effective length of the boat when calculating overall length for mooring fees!I am happy with the 33, but if I were doing it all over again I might give more weight to the dinghy storage issue in selecting a new boat.I am not sure what you mean by "passagemaking" but for offshore work of any serious kind I would keep the small inflatable for ship to shore and get a liferaft secured properly on the foredeck for real emergencies. But then again, would you be doing that kind of voyaging in a 33?