Who has a little dinghy?
iWaffle
Posts: 2,208 Member
I found a small lake nearby that I could use to launch a small rowboat into. Does anyone else use this for upper body exercise? It looks like it would be a fantastic workout. Rowing builds strength and also functions as some type of cardio I'm sure. I can tell that this would be great for my arms and back.
Let me know if you have experience using a small dinghy and how it worked out for you.
Let me know if you have experience using a small dinghy and how it worked out for you.
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I get my kayak wet as often as possible.0 -
rowing . . . is that what we're calling it these days?0
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BRB. Working on a list of people who have little dinghys. If we've interacted and you know i might put you on this list, you may PM me and i will erase your name from it.0
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in for getting my oar wet0
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BRB. Working on a list of people who have little dinghys. If we've interacted and you know i might put you on this list, you may PM me and i will erase your name from it.
I'm on that list FOR SURE0 -
I really prefer a bigger dinghy.
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I thought it was about the motion of the dinghy in the water. not the size.0
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Define 'little'...0
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@ JackDiesel That would depend on the size of the 'canal' your dinghy is in!!0
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As a person who makes a living with his dingy I will have to recommend that you use a paddle made of spruce. Also referred too as "hard wood" if you use anything like pine or balsa wood, after extended amounts of use the paddle will become too soft and start to droop. Pine and balsa are often referred to as "soft wood" so you will have a less effective stroke with soft wood than you would with hard wood making navigating your dinghy through a canal very cumbersome!0
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I found a small lake nearby that I could use to launch a small rowboat into. Does anyone else use this for upper body exercise? It looks like it would be a fantastic workout. Rowing builds strength and also functions as some type of cardio I'm sure. I can tell that this would be great for my arms and back.
Let me know if you have experience using a small dinghy and how it worked out for you.
I have a fiberglass dink. Keel needs some fiberglass work. $100. FOB Beaumont, Texas.
BTW that is not me or my dink in my profile pics....mine's bigger0 -
Better than a dinghy or a canoe...kayak. Nice upper body workout, maneuverable, fun.0
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As a person who makes a living with his dingy I will have to recommend that you use a paddle made of spruce. Also referred too as "hard wood" if you use anything like pine or balsa wood, after extended amounts of use the paddle will become too soft and start to droop. Pine and balsa are often referred to as "soft wood" so you will have a less effective stroke with soft wood than you would with hard wood making navigating your dinghy through a canal very cumbersome!
you really know a lot about dinghy's! And your expertise on wood is impressive!0 -
As a person who makes a living with his dingy I will have to recommend that you use a paddle made of spruce. Also referred too as "hard wood" if you use anything like pine or balsa wood, after extended amounts of use the paddle will become too soft and start to droop. Pine and balsa are often referred to as "soft wood" so you will have a less effective stroke with soft wood than you would with hard wood making navigating your dinghy through a canal very cumbersome!
you really know a lot about dinghy's! And your expertise on wood is impressive!
Why thank you it's nice to know I can share my years of experience to help out. Next week we talk about lower units .0 -
My dinghy is average in length, but it's beam(or "girth") is above average. This increases stability and allows for long cardio burns, often leaving me exhausted on the weekends.0
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As a person who makes a living with his dingy I will have to recommend that you use a paddle made of spruce. Also referred too as "hard wood" if you use anything like pine or balsa wood, after extended amounts of use the paddle will become too soft and start to droop. Pine and balsa are often referred to as "soft wood" so you will have a less effective stroke with soft wood than you would with hard wood making navigating your dinghy through a canal very cumbersome!
^this is true. However, with adequate stimulation, for example rubbing vigorously with a textured object, soft wood can become harder. There are also chemical remedies that give spruce a run for its' money!0 -
@ JackDiesel That would depend on the size of the 'canal' your dinghy is in!!
I’ve heard mariners spin tales of large expanses of water where they had to fling their dinghy about yet could never moor against port sides—forever adrift in a briny harbor.0 -
I have two "Dinghy's" and I choose the one that best fits the needs of a given situation.
The first is long and narrow and best suited for when I want to work out by myself:
The other is designed for comfort and is always ridden by more than one person:
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And here I was, thinking that this post would be boring as heck.0
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