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#1
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I haven't boated much (just boating on friends boats)and want to get
an idea of a managagable size boat to purchase. Is 31 ft too long, or should I purchase a 27 or 28 footer to begin? Looking back, what would you have done differently when you you first took the plunge buying your first boat? |
#2
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#3
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Assuming you are looking at a full cabin boat and will be storing it at a
marina, bigger is always better. It is very difficult to find a buyer for a boat in this size. Starting at a 26 and then going to a 28 in a year or so and then to a 30 in another year is not practical as it may take a year or so just to sell the one you have. If you know you want something to cruise at slower speeds and spend the weekend on w/ friends and stuff, then the bigger you can afford the more you will enjoy the boat. Just remember, dock fees are based on size and insurance and gas use goes up also. I would definitely be looking for twin diesels in this size boat. Once you decide on the most money you can afford for the boat, start looking. Just remember, you are definitely in a buyers market in these boats. If you show up with money to buy, you can negotiate a real deal as the owner is constantly looking at maintenance and dock fee cost every day he keeps it. Good luck and happy hunting. -- Tony my boats at http://t.thomas.home.mchsi.com "John H" wrote in message ... On 13 Mar 2004 14:26:06 -0800, (Trevor) wrote: I haven't boated much (just boating on friends boats)and want to get an idea of a managagable size boat to purchase. Is 31 ft too long, or should I purchase a 27 or 28 footer to begin? Looking back, what would you have done differently when you you first took the plunge buying your first boat? Take a boating course and start small! John H On the 'Poco Loco' out of Deale, MD on the beautiful Chesapeake Bay! |
#4
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#5
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Far as I can tell, someone wrote:
I would have bought a 52 foot Hatteras or Bertram instead of a 13 foot Boston Whaler Sport with a 25 horse Merc. Of course, I was 12 at the time, but still... :) Thanks for making me spill my coffee, Tom. |
#6
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On Sun, 14 Mar 2004 17:10:32 GMT, Petey the Wonder Dog
wrote: Far as I can tell, someone wrote: I would have bought a 52 foot Hatteras or Bertram instead of a 13 foot Boston Whaler Sport with a 25 horse Merc. Of course, I was 12 at the time, but still... :) Thanks for making me spill my coffee, Tom. Sorry. :) Later, Tom S. Woodstock, CT ----------- "Angling may be said to be so like the mathematics that it can never be fully learnt..." Izaak Walton "The Compleat Angler", 1653 |
#7
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Trevor wrote:
I haven't boated much (just boating on friends boats)and want to get an idea of a managagable size boat to purchase. Is 31 ft too long, or should I purchase a 27 or 28 footer to begin? Looking back, what would you have done differently when you you first took the plunge buying your first boat? A lot depends on where and how you plan to use the boat. Large lakes or ocean/great lakes vs small shallow lakes vs river and streams will all play a part in ones selection. Overall size will be effected by these as well. Are currents a issue, what about wind the list is endless. I would suggest that you look around at where you want to boat and observe the various types of craft in use. Them determine what type would fit the scope of what you want to do. If the craft is large and you are a little scared of handeling it see if you can hire someone who has experiance with these typeps of craft to show you the tricks on handeling. I would aslo suggest looking into a boating safty course before even purchasing a boat. You will learn just basic handeling and the rules of the road. But also be able to get insite from folks that are already on the water. Good Luck and happy boating.. Capt Jack R.. ps these folks have classes avaiable in most areas http://www.cgaux.org/ |
#8
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![]() Hi Trevor, I think you need to learn to boat before you learn to yacht. The larger the boat, the more knowledge and skill are required to operate it s·a·f·e·l·y. Let me toss a couple of test questions at you. If you can't answer them off the top of your head you should conceder a very docile boat. Not a cabin cruiser. (That learning curve would be like trying to take high school driver's education in a moving van.) If you cannot answer *any* of the questions, You REALLY need to take the USCG-A or Power Squadron boating safety class before taking the boat out. 1. You are traveling a river. Your direction is away from the ocean. You see a blinking green light or green marker panel. Where is the channel in relation to the green marker? What if the marker were Red? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2. It is night time. You see a red light and to the right, a white light. A. What is it? B. Which direction is it going? C. Do you have right of way? You see a single white light. What is it? D. You see a green on the left side, a red on the right side, and a white above the two. What should you do? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3. How many fire extinguishers is a 20 foot boat required to carry? How about a 26' boat. What type(s) or weights? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4. You have a family aboard. Yourself, woman who does not swim, and 2 children. A boy, 16 years old and a girl, 7 years old. You are 35 miles from the nearest land. A. What type of lifejackets do you need? B. What type of signal devices are required? C. Who is required to wear a lifejacket? 5. You bought a signal rocket or flare kit in January 2000. What must you do? For a first boat you might want to conceder a deck boat or pontoon boat. Deckboats have excellent performance and offer many amenities. Deckboats and pontoons can be equipped with a canvas "cabin" for camping. They are often equipped with a pottie and freshwater supply. Pontoons are very fuel efficient too. A big consideration in today's fuel economy. (BTW a PC cruiser will burn 20+ gallons of premium per hour.) Hint: The answers to these questions can be found on my website(below) or by looking at http://www.cgaux.org/ -- Capt. Frank __c \ _ | \_ __\_| oooo \_____ ~~~~|______________/ ~~~~~ www.home.earthlink.net/~aartworks "Trevor" wrote in message om... I haven't boated much (just boating on friends boats)and want to get an idea of a managagable size boat to purchase. Is 31 ft too long, or should I purchase a 27 or 28 footer to begin? Looking back, what would you have done differently when you you first took the plunge buying your first boat? |
#9
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I agree with Capt. Frank, but I would also add that is might be a good idea
to charter a few boats to get an idea what kind of boat you want, and then buy a used boat. After a few years of boating you will have a much better idea of what you want, and you won't take the big depreciation of a new boat. I think with some coaching from an experienced boater, you should be albe to handle a 22-24' boat. "Capt Frank Hopkins" wrote in message hlink.net... Hi Trevor, I think you need to learn to boat before you learn to yacht. The larger the boat, the more knowledge and skill are required to operate it s·a·f·e·l·y. Let me toss a couple of test questions at you. If you can't answer them off the top of your head you should conceder a very docile boat. Not a cabin cruiser. (That learning curve would be like trying to take high school driver's education in a moving van.) If you cannot answer *any* of the questions, You REALLY need to take the USCG-A or Power Squadron boating safety class before taking the boat out. 1. You are traveling a river. Your direction is away from the ocean. You see a blinking green light or green marker panel. Where is the channel in relation to the green marker? What if the marker were Red? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2. It is night time. You see a red light and to the right, a white light. A. What is it? B. Which direction is it going? C. Do you have right of way? You see a single white light. What is it? D. You see a green on the left side, a red on the right side, and a white above the two. What should you do? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3. How many fire extinguishers is a 20 foot boat required to carry? How about a 26' boat. What type(s) or weights? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4. You have a family aboard. Yourself, woman who does not swim, and 2 children. A boy, 16 years old and a girl, 7 years old. You are 35 miles from the nearest land. A. What type of lifejackets do you need? B. What type of signal devices are required? C. Who is required to wear a lifejacket? 5. You bought a signal rocket or flare kit in January 2000. What must you do? For a first boat you might want to conceder a deck boat or pontoon boat. Deckboats have excellent performance and offer many amenities. Deckboats and pontoons can be equipped with a canvas "cabin" for camping. They are often equipped with a pottie and freshwater supply. Pontoons are very fuel efficient too. A big consideration in today's fuel economy. (BTW a PC cruiser will burn 20+ gallons of premium per hour.) Hint: The answers to these questions can be found on my website(below) or by looking at http://www.cgaux.org/ -- Capt. Frank __c \ _ | \_ __\_| oooo \_____ ~~~~|______________/ ~~~~~ www.home.earthlink.net/~aartworks "Trevor" wrote in message om... I haven't boated much (just boating on friends boats)and want to get an idea of a managagable size boat to purchase. Is 31 ft too long, or should I purchase a 27 or 28 footer to begin? Looking back, what would you have done differently when you you first took the plunge buying your first boat? |
#10
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well i can tell you that if you havent really drivin a boat you sure dont
want a 30 footer! i would suggest maybe a 25ft then next season upgrade "Trevor" wrote in message om... I haven't boated much (just boating on friends boats)and want to get an idea of a managagable size boat to purchase. Is 31 ft too long, or should I purchase a 27 or 28 footer to begin? Looking back, what would you have done differently when you you first took the plunge buying your first boat? |
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