Puget Sound Newbie Needing Advice

crashnburn63

Seaman Apprentice
Joined
Mar 4, 2008
Messages
30
Hi-

My apologies if you've already read this post in rec.boats...

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, Duroboat, 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 buy used amd keep the initial investment to < $5k (we are new to all this, after all).

I've also had one guy recommend we look at RIB inflatables (e.g. Zodiac)
but I wonder how the bottom and those tubes will tolerate being dragged up on oyster shells and barnacles.

Anyway, thanks in advance for your $.02,

-dm
 

tashasdaddy

Honorary Moderator Emeritus
Joined
Nov 11, 2005
Messages
51,019
Re: Puget Sound Newbie Needing Advice

your main concern looks like weight, 2 stroke weight far less than 4 strokes. i would not buy a new boat to put in that position. what is the water depth, when there is water? i think your budget could be used to get either another davit, or a total lift system. no matter, for any boat to last, you need to get fresh water to the dock, to wash down the boat, get the salt off, after every use, and flush the motor.
 

crashnburn63

Seaman Apprentice
Joined
Mar 4, 2008
Messages
30
Re: Puget Sound Newbie Needing Advice

Looks like 3-4 of water at the dock at dead high tide. And zero within an hour or two of low. We would have the ability to run a garden hose down to the dock to flush the motor and rinse stuff..

Interesting about the weight diff, the couple of spec sheets I had looked at on the web only showed maybe 20-30 pound difference for this size of motor.

My neighbor who fishes here a lot is adamant about 4 stroke being better, not only for maintenance but also environmentally. He also thought they throttled down better and would eliminate the need for a separate electric trolling motor on this size of boat (14-15 foot al.).

Thanks for the fb,

-dm
 

KCook

Lieutenant Commander
Joined
Jan 24, 2002
Messages
1,624
Re: Puget Sound Newbie Needing Advice

RIBs have hard bottoms. And different materials are used. Some have a poly bottom. The junk on the beach will scratch this poly, but who cares? The difficulty with a RIB is that it will weigh more than a simple aluminum skiff.

Kelly
 

dave11

Lieutenant Junior Grade
Joined
Dec 2, 2007
Messages
1,195
Re: Puget Sound Newbie Needing Advice

Look at Stabicraft boats.
 
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