To get that carb off, pull the intake with the carb attached, then remove the carb.
Yeah, so I was told. But I don't think I want to mess with that -- at least this time around. I also don't have any specific instructions for what "pull the intake with the carb attached" means, and I don't have any diagrams of precisely what to do. Sure, I can probably figure that out; but after talking to the mechanic and getting their likely turn around time -- and that he can have a full rebuild kit for it within a week -- I decided just to take it to him and let him do it. These are the people I bought it from, and I like to throw them business when I can anyway.
But I do have one question you might answer ...
So I know this problem was totally my fault, but I'm unsure how to avoid it in the future. At the end of the boating year, just before COVID struck, I did the usual "winterizing" of the motor which included draining the fuel line and the carb to the best of my ability without disassembly. That's always worked in the past, but this time the boat sat for two years without use, and I can't really blame the carb for gunking up with some minor residue over that time. But then the question is "How could I have avoided that?" What more was there to do? Run the motor to use any possible remaining fuel in the float bowl or internals? Would THAT have avoided the problem? Manage to spray something like Sea Foam into it as it's running? Pull the carb off and thoroughly clean it and blow it out? What would it take?
I have several 2-cycle engines around there that didn't end up gunking up over that time, and a 4-cycle log splitter engine that had no problem. But none of them sat unused as long as the Tohatsu 20 did.