Re: priming the carb
It read to me like he has an electric pump already in post#10......
"I have tried pumping the throttle and and turning on the ignition to let the fuel pump start pumping."
Turning on the key to start the fuel pump pumping only works if there IS an electric fuel pump, and the key is in the Cranking position. I would be surprised on that year that there is an electric pump, maybe Cobalts did that or maybe one was added on later. I hope carrotsnapper can verify whether he has one or not. The reason I doubt it has one is the fact that he can only get gas into the carb by pouring the gas into the engine and starting it, then once the engine catches then the mechanical fuel pump on the engine will pump better and faster and fill the carb sooner. An electric fuel pump will pump at about the same rate with the engine cranking or while it is running. There also has to be an oil pressure switch and a cranking bypass circuit for an electric fuel pump to be "legal" and safe.
And regarding pouring the fuel down the carb throat then leaving it in there for the trip to the lake, well I like that idea even less because of the cylinder washing that will happen as the gasoline works the oil film off of the cylinder walls.
In any event, an electric fuel pump will fill the carb without the engine running usually only if the key is turned to the cranking position. You may be able to hear it, but may not over the cranking noise. As I mentioned before there should be an oil pressure cutoff switch that will stop the electric fuel pump from pumping if the engine dies. There is also a bypass circuit that will run the fuel pump while cranking. If the fuel pump kicks on with the key in the on position without the engine running then I would think something may not be wired correctly or a component has failed. That is a dangerous situation, engine dead, ignition on, fuel pump pumping and carb overflowing or fuel line breaks or leaks or......