How you determine what it costs to run your boat?

redneck joe

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Mar 18, 2009
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or $3600 per year slip where I was.... One of the big reasons I went back to a trailer boat. Do miss just stepping on to her and relaxing.
 

Benny67

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Apr 21, 2015
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571
I'm lucky...my slip is 2K/season.

It's the moving to and from the ramp is what is an expense I'd like to do without.

Problem is to own a truck and boat trailer to move that beast would be a big expense in itself...the bigger the boat, the bigger the bill...sad thing is once you move up to a larger boat you can't go back.
 

Benny67

Chief Petty Officer
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Apr 21, 2015
Messages
571
Going back to a trailer size boat would be a drag..I like the 10ft beam/bath and shower/aft cabin and all the deck space. Not to mention the better stability of a bigger boat in general
 

dingbat

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Nov 20, 2001
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A Darwin Award winner on a fishing forum told me that I was obligated to inform Canada Revenue of any barter I did as income
The "action" in 1999 came about by the popularity of a practice we call "Hoeing" locally.

"Hoeing" is where a group of guys/gals fish on a private boat then split the cost of fuel, drinks, bait or whatever at cost. The charter fishing industry argued that taking any form of monetary compensation constituted commercial operation of a vessel and thus required the captain to be licensed and carry commercial vessel insurance. Sounds petty, but I'll give you a little background.

The average cost "1/2 day" charter (up to 6 people) locally is $600 and up. With a Striper limit of 1 fish per person per day, it doesn't take long when the fish are "running" to catch your limit and be back to the dock in an hour or two. It works for the "once a year meat hunters"...

Then you have the guys like me that fish 8-10 hours a day, five or six days a week for the first 4 weeks of the season. Costs add up in the hurry...everyone is always on the lookout for someone who wants to go fishing the first 4 weeks of the season. I network thru a local fishing club but a lot of guys started advertising for "hoes" on the local fishing forums which got some of the charter guys really upset. Locally, quite an big issue until the language was clarified to allow for private boats to cost share
 

redneck joe

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Mar 18, 2009
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Going back to a trailer size boat would be a drag..I like the 10ft beam/bath and shower/aft cabin and all the deck space. Not to mention the better stability of a bigger boat in general



I did it and am very happy, wouldn't mind another big one some day but mine does all I need and like it in rough water better than my two bigger boats. But - that is why there are so many boat styles out there...
 

Benny67

Chief Petty Officer
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Apr 21, 2015
Messages
571
I did it and am very happy, wouldn't mind another big one some day but mine does all I need and like it in rough water better than my two bigger boats. But - that is why there are so many boat styles out there...

I'm thinking about selling and going to a smaller cruiser until I retire and then switching back...like I said, it's tough to go back...especially to a single screw again.

I am on the fence...I really like the Boat I have now.

It appears you are a Carver man as well. I got a 27ft Montego double cabin and I really don't want to part with it. It's a fantastic boat. I just wish it was a inboard instead of an I/O
 

QBhoy

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Mar 10, 2016
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I would hate to even think about adding it up. The latest boat in my ownership (only had it just under 3 years) has a A4 folder of receipts that will run into 4 figures.
Hey...there are worse things to spend your money on. It's a passion for most.. even a lifestyle for some...like me. Haha. Literally eat, sleep, dream boats. Can't stop buying them, working on them, fixing friends and convincing other friends to own them !
 

QBhoy

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Mar 10, 2016
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Further more...I think it's just in my DNA...one grand father was a chief engineer in a Glasgow ship yard, the other ferried people across the river Clyde in a towing boat !.... father always had boats since before I was born...had my first rowing boat at 5 years old...first outboard at 6....rest is history. Jeez...I'm pretty sure I could be a property tycoon, if it wasn't for boats ! Haha.
 

redneck joe

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Mar 18, 2009
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I would hate to even think about adding it up. The latest boat in my ownership (only had it just under 3 years) has a A4 folder of receipts that will run into 4 figures.
Hey...there are worse things to spend your money on. It's a passion for most.. even a lifestyle for some...like me. Haha. Literally eat, sleep, dream boats. Can't stop buying them, working on them, fixing friends and convincing other friends to own them !



quit keeping recipts.


duh...


:D
 

redneck joe

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Mar 18, 2009
Messages
14,363
Further more...I think it's just in my DNA...one grand father was a chief engineer in a Glasgow ship yard, the other ferried people across the river Clyde in a towing boat !.... father always had boats since before I was born...had my first rowing boat at 5 years old...first outboard at 6....rest is history. Jeez...I'm pretty sure I could be a property tycoon, if it wasn't for boats ! Haha.



dad has pictures of me in diapers in his first boat, back in ~67/68
 

redneck joe

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Mar 18, 2009
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14,363
I'm thinking about selling and going to a smaller cruiser until I retire and then switching back...like I said, it's tough to go back...especially to a single screw again.

I am on the fence...I really like the Boat I have now.

It appears you are a Carver man as well. I got a 27ft Montego double cabin and I really don't want to part with it. It's a fantastic boat. I just wish it was a inboard instead of an I/O



Carver man by accident, picked up essentially free and spent way too much on it but at boat #15 or so my favorite. My 34 Bayliner was awesome for lots of room and layout but the Carver feels like a boat again, not a brick in the water going 18 mph at point 8 mpg.


The kicker is my get home motor if something goes awry. I did about 100 miles this weekend from thusrday afternoon to Sunday morning.


This was my Sunday sunrise run to the ramp to go home to my wife. 26 mph at about 3 mpg.


20170910_070113.jpg
 

QBhoy

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Mar 10, 2016
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dad has pictures of me in diapers in his first boat, back in ~67/68

Oh man...me too, in 1979 on Loch Lomond. Was 4 weeks old when I took my first sail in his Shetland 498 with a 40hp yamaha. That very engine and boat is still running and sailing on the very same loch. It's about 40 years old now !
 

444

Senior Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jul 16, 2010
Messages
704
I do all my own repairs and maintenance. Once I had the bugs worked out, my costs were mostly just fuel. If I take someone else out with, I ask they chip in for fuel for the boat. I don't ask them to chip in for fuel for the pickup to make the 1hr drive to get to the lake but I do explain to them how much fuel the boat burns for an afternoon of tubing. I always eat the lion's share of the cost.
 

HVACRat

Seaman Apprentice
Joined
Aug 6, 2009
Messages
31
I've never calculated it, but I have thought about it a time or two. I have determined it takes most of my free time and most of my extra money; but it's worth it! Fishing, hunting, and just plain having fun in my boat is worth every dime I spend on her.
 
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