![]() |
Looking for recommendations on power boat for fishing, crabbing andgeneral play
Hi-
I'm trolling for some net.wisdom. Here's the situation: my family is in the process of acquiring a property on Puget Sound, in the Seattle area. The property will come with a dock in a very nice cove. The hitch is the dock is totally out of the water at low tide. AFAIK, extending the dock would be a legal impossibility due to environmental regs. So it is what it is. I've owned a 16 foot canoe that our family has used for many years for short paddle trips on the sound and in lakes in the area. But this place cries out for a small power boat. Something just large enough to take the kids salmon fishing and crabbing, and maybe tow the kids around on an inflatable toy on a really hot day (Puget Sound water varies between cold and colder). The current owner has put a 1000 lb capacity davit crane with electric motor on the end of the dock, and he uses that to raise his small skiff onto the dock. I know next to nothing about power/fishing boats, but from talking to a few neighbors with boats their general recommendations seem to be: 1. Buy a boat small/light enough to use the davit crane. 2. Aluminum hull is way superior to fiberglass for this application, since the beach is rocky and full of oyster shells. The feedback I've gotten is that a good aluminum hull will tolerate being beached when the tide is out and we can't use the dock. 3. An outboard in the 15-20 hp range on a boat with a 300-400 pound dry weight should be sufficient to pull teen-agers around on a tube, but still work for trolling. 4. Four stroke is better than 2. Yamaha is better than Honda which is better than the others.. 5. Welded hulls are better than riveted. Based upon this advice, I've looked at web sites for Alumaweld, Lund, Smokercraft. Not sure if there are other brands I should look at. Welded hulls look way expensive. We don't have a definite price range, but my initial thinking was to keep the initial investment to $5k (we are new to all this, after all). I've also had one guy recommend we look at inflatables (e.g. Zodiac) but I wonder how those tubes will tolerate being dragged up on oyster shells. Anyway, thanks in advance for your $.02, -dm |
Looking for recommendations on power boat for fishing, crabbing and general play
wrote in message ... Hi- I'm trolling for some net.wisdom. Here's the situation: my family is in the process of acquiring a property on Puget Sound, in the Seattle area. The property will come with a dock in a very nice cove. The hitch is the dock is totally out of the water at low tide. AFAIK, extending the dock would be a legal impossibility due to environmental regs. So it is what it is. I've owned a 16 foot canoe that our family has used for many years for short paddle trips on the sound and in lakes in the area. But this place cries out for a small power boat. Something just large enough to take the kids salmon fishing and crabbing, and maybe tow the kids around on an inflatable toy on a really hot day (Puget Sound water varies between cold and colder). The current owner has put a 1000 lb capacity davit crane with electric motor on the end of the dock, and he uses that to raise his small skiff onto the dock. I know next to nothing about power/fishing boats, but from talking to a few neighbors with boats their general recommendations seem to be: 1. Buy a boat small/light enough to use the davit crane. 2. Aluminum hull is way superior to fiberglass for this application, since the beach is rocky and full of oyster shells. The feedback I've gotten is that a good aluminum hull will tolerate being beached when the tide is out and we can't use the dock. 3. An outboard in the 15-20 hp range on a boat with a 300-400 pound dry weight should be sufficient to pull teen-agers around on a tube, but still work for trolling. 4. Four stroke is better than 2. Yamaha is better than Honda which is better than the others.. 5. Welded hulls are better than riveted. Based upon this advice, I've looked at web sites for Alumaweld, Lund, Smokercraft. Not sure if there are other brands I should look at. Welded hulls look way expensive. We don't have a definite price range, but my initial thinking was to keep the initial investment to $5k (we are new to all this, after all). I've also had one guy recommend we look at inflatables (e.g. Zodiac) but I wonder how those tubes will tolerate being dragged up on oyster shells. Anyway, thanks in advance for your $.02, -dm Well...unless you're buying well used you probably won't find much in that price bracket. For the size you are looking for, rivited seems to be the norm. eg; http://www.princecraft.com/Content/e...ing_boats.aspx |
Looking for recommendations on power boat for fishing, crabbing and general play
crashnburn63 wrote:
4. Four stroke is better than 2. Yamaha is better than Honda which is better than the others. My 20hp Honda 4 stroke is the most high maintenance, expensive, (relative to hp) and cantankerous outboard I've ever owned. And in my lifetime I've owned quite a few from 5hp to 225hp, of various makes. I should have bought a 25hp Yamaha 2 stroke instead. I've looked at web sites for Alumaweld, Lund, Smokercraft. Not sure if there are other brands I should look at. I'm in a different situation so I ended up with something else, but I was impressed with these when I was last shopping for Aluminum: http://www.duroboat.com/boats-details.php?modelClass=14 Rick |
Looking for recommendations on power boat for fishing, crabbingand general play
On Mar 3, 11:44*am, wrote:
Hi- I'm trolling for some net.wisdom. Here's the situation: my family is in the process of acquiring a property on Puget Sound, in the Seattle area. The property will come with a dock in a very nice cove. The hitch is the dock is totally out of the water at low tide. AFAIK, extending the dock would be a legal impossibility due to environmental regs. So it is what it is. I've owned a 16 foot canoe that our family has used for many years for short paddle trips on the sound and in lakes in the area. But this place cries out for a small power boat. Something just large enough to take the kids salmon fishing and crabbing, and maybe tow the kids around on an inflatable toy on a really hot day (Puget Sound water varies between cold and colder). The current owner has put a 1000 lb capacity davit crane with electric motor on the end of the dock, and he uses that to raise his small skiff onto the dock. I know next to nothing about power/fishing boats, *but from talking to a few neighbors with boats their general recommendations seem to be: 1. Buy a boat small/light enough to use the davit crane. 2. Aluminum hull is way superior to fiberglass for this application, since the beach is rocky and full of oyster shells. The feedback I've gotten is that a good aluminum hull will tolerate being beached when the tide is out and we can't use the dock. 3. An outboard in the 15-20 hp range on a boat with a 300-400 pound dry weight should be sufficient to pull teen-agers around on a tube, but still work for trolling. 4. Four stroke is better than 2. Yamaha is better than Honda which is better than the others.. 5. Welded hulls are better than riveted. Based upon this advice, I've looked at web sites for Alumaweld, Lund, Smokercraft. Not sure if there are other brands I should look at. Welded hulls look way expensive. We don't have a definite price range, but my initial thinking was to keep the initial investment to $5k (we are new to all this, after all). I've also had one guy recommend we look at inflatables (e.g. Zodiac) but I wonder how those tubes will tolerate being dragged up on oyster shells. Anyway, thanks in advance for your $.02, -dm I will be building some of these type boats this summer for sale, but you are a good distance away;) http://www.yaimkool.com If you get up on the builders group and find a local builder, I could probably get some lines and info off to you to have one built. Perfect for your use, I would guess.. Scotty |
Looking for recommendations on power boat for fishing, crabbing and general play
|
Looking for recommendations on power boat for fishing, crabbing and general play
|
Looking for recommendations on power boat for fishing, crabbingand general play
What is folks opinion w.r.t RIB inflatables for this use? As I said,
I've got real doubts about the durability of one used on our rocky beaches, but maybe I am wrong about that? Thanks, -dm |
Looking for recommendations on power boat for fishing, crabbing and general play
Vic Smith wrote:
Is the Honda giving you non-carb problems? Carb problems, water pump problems, problems of undetermined cause problems, and bank account problems. Rick |
Looking for recommendations on power boat for fishing, crabbing and general play
|
Looking for recommendations on power boat for fishing, crabbingand general play
On Mar 3, 6:12*pm, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Mon, 3 Mar 2008 15:01:44 -0800 (PST), wrote: What is folks opinion w.r.t RIB inflatables for this use? As I said, I've got real doubts about the durability of one used on our rocky beaches, but maybe I am wrong about that? They take a licking and keep on ticking. Can I assume that the wooden flat bottom skiff I suggest, is not something you would consider? Wood;) it be better if it had a modified vee or are there other reasons... I think the Brockway type skiff (dry weight 250) with the tiller 25 would suit his needs and might even be able to fit close to his budget too. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:51 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com