My son is 10 and I am still not comfortable with him in the bow seats. The rail is not very tall. At no wake I allow him to sit there, but that is it. And even though he is a good swimmer, he always wears a life jacket if the boat is in motion. I am afraid he would panic if he was to fall in. Might be overly cautious, but my son always comes home uninjured at the end of the day.
uh......you need a different boat then....IMO. My kids would be bored stiff sitting with the old folks in the back, rather than in the bow. Maybe if we are in crazy waves I'd worry about very little ones up there, but not in anything "normal". We sometimes take some waves slightly over the bow just for fun....the kids love it, no risk at all, except for getting a bit wet.
That said, i have seen many bowriders with such shallow bow seats I might be concerned with smaller kids up there. I'd never own one of these.
Does anyone know the law in NY? On my boats it is nice to be able to climb up front when docking just to help guide the boat in, usually the boat is out of gear and is floating in towards the dock.
I have a cruiser type boat with a sunpad, there are rails on either side of the sunpad. When in a no-wake zone, (and only in a no-wake zone), my 6 yr old son asks if he can sit atop the bow. Have let him some times, and other times have said no. He has a life jacket on, and sits in the center holding the rails. I'm just interested if there is any regulation against this, (live in NY), or what other boaters thought about this.
It is such a thrill for him that I would like to let him do this, but don't want to run against some regulation that I am unaware of.
or positioning oneself on the vessel?s bow while underway in an area not intended to accommodate passengers (bow riding). Bow riding does not include those times during docking, anchoring, or handling sails, when it is otherwise advisable to wear a PFD on
an open bow area."
Hope this helps.