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Tim Tim is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Nov 2006
Posts: 19,111
Default Boating on a budget? That's for me!

On Jan 5, 6:57*am, Tim wrote:
On Jan 5, 3:02*am, wrote:









On Wed, 04 Jan 2012 23:51:48 -0700, Canuck57
wrote:


The cheapest way to own a boat is to use it a lot. Then your per hour
cost drops to a very low number.


Or rent it. *Also saves patching up road chipping and the like. *Better
gas millage too when getting there.


--


Most of the people I know would be thousands of dollars a year ahead
if they just rented a boat on the dozen days a year they actually go
out. By the time you amortize a $40,000 boat over the 40 or 50 times
they use it before it just rots on the lift and toss in the
maintenance headaches from stale gas and other things sitting around
unused causes, $150 an hour rental is a bargain. They usually end up
getting a few thousand on a trade in and start over, promising
themselves they will try to use the boat more next time.
We get out 3 times a week for a couple hours each and I figure boating
costs me less than $8-10 an hour, all costs including maintenance and
gas in the computation. Gas is the biggest part of that number and
when we go slow in manatee season or when my wife says it is cold
(below 80) that can get me closer to $6-7 an hour.


round here, there's not much chance on renting a boat that is unless
it's some giant houseboat. The marina liabilities won't allow it.


But used boats go reasonamble. I've got $1500.00 (plus some repairs)
in my 18'r and even less in my 23' Marquis which is actually a bigger
and better boat.

The small one is great for a fast hitch-n-go. The bigger one, is a
real tug to pull behind my car, so It's geting built for a river
cruise short vacation....

Still less than going to Kings Island, Dolly World or 6 flags.