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![]() wrote in message ... On Wed, 28 Nov 2007 10:38:45 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: I would think that the reasoning behind this is that people with small crafts are tired of paying slip fees for something mostly portable. That's what I like about my 23'r. I can still trailer it around, and not be stuck with slip fees and not knowing that my boat was being watched or not. And/or the marina is finding that they can pull in much more revenue by accomodating larger crafts with minor expansion expense. Especially if they charge by the foot of the boat. People with smaller boats keep them in slips so they can use them more. It's really as simple as that. They like to stop by after work during the week and go out for an hour or two. If they have to drive home, hitch up the trailer, drive to the launch, wait in line, launch, retrieve, etc, etc, they simply can't use the boat as often and impulsivly. It's not that they are tired of paying, it's that they can't afford it any longer, but they want to hang on to whatever kind of boating lifestyle they can still manage. When the marinas reconfigure for larger boats, it is for fewer, larger slips in the same space as the more numerous small slips. They just want it configured for something they can sell. The bottom line is that the small boats are really being squeezed out by fuel costs, not slip fees. Bear in mind that most people with these small boats are at the lower end of the financial spectrum compared with the big boat owners. Fuel costs hit them a lot harder. You could even argue that the big boys don't really feel the fuel price increases much at all. They don't have to chose between fuel and a slip. They just write a check and enjoy themselves. My boat is too large to trailer. I could save a lot by putting my boat on a mooring, but like trailering, it would seriously curtail my use and enjoyment of the boat. I want to use it as much as possible, and I can afford it, so I pay for a slip. Not everyone is in that position. Blue collar boaters could really use a break. They need it. wrote: On Wed, 28 Nov 2007 08:34:13 -0800 (PST), Chuck Gould wrote: On Nov 28, 3:22?am, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Tue, 27 Nov 2007 18:12:40 -0800, "Calif Bill" wrote: The 20% or so of the boaters in the country, the fuel costs of getting the fishing hole with the 12-16' fishing boat is going to be 10-20x the fuel costs for a day of fishing. I've had this discussion with a number of tournament types over the past couple of weeks and their overall approach to the upcoming southern season and next summer. A lot of guys are going to double up and team fish. It would make sense that people will change some of their customary boating practices to adapt to the higher fuel costs, but I still predict that few people who currently boat will be driven out of the pastime soley because gas or diesel is up a couple of dollars per gallon. In my area, it was very apparent this past season that the bulk of fishing boats from 16 to 20 feet were absent from slips. The parking lots at area ramps were far more crowded than in the past. Seems pretty obvious what happened. Some marinas are responding by removing the smaller slips and replacing them with new accomodations for larger boats. Lots of the trailer size crowd also store their boats near a ramp. When you look at the cost of leaving a boat in a slip, it is large. More bottom paint and cleaning as well as the cost of the slip. Marina Del Rey, has boat storage about 200 yards from the ramp. So someone can easily dump the boat in the water for a couple hours fishing. Lots of ramp areas do the same thing, nearby storage. |
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