perry sir.... in all the discussions, you never shared w/ the folks what you thought of my boat when you visited..... i hope it passed.
and parkside still has slips available....... [/quote]
Rest assured Sir Aaron, it did pass. I didn't know I was supposed to alert the rest of us forum junkies that I saw it.
I never mentiond to folks here that you told me that you might sell your boat because I thought it was privileged info, but it looks to be public knowledge. Are you actually going to sell it, or are you still thinking about it? Do you want to just give it to me? My mom said something about a lawyer....
Barring becoming the new steward of Sir Aaron's boat, here is the latest tricabin I'm looking at:
http://www.boattrader.com/listing/1982- ... -101651207
I want to show-up with a surveyor and 50 C-notes*. If the hull is good, that is all that I'm interested in at this point. Based upon what I've seen in the used boat market, I think I might be better off starting with a bare hull and gutting it. Yeah, I know, I'll never get out of it what I put into it, but if I buy a POS and put new engines, AC, generator, interior, new wiring, etc. in it, it will outlast my boating career, and besides, it will be exactly what I want. I asked my kid if he would help me remodel it. He asked how long it would take. I told him a year or two and he said "That's not too long. You mean we'd be able to use it as soon as the summer after next?"

This from a 14 year old. My wife is looking forward to picking new furnishings and the like. She is quite frankly more excited about the prospect than I am, because I know that expensive grimlins and disappointment can lurk behind every panel. I guess she knows too, but her part will be to mostly write the checks.
Before I checked the forum this evening, I was shopping for a boat trailer. Starting at $5K or so, you can buy a semi-trailer that is used to haul boats. I'm mulling over the idea of buying a trailer to keep my boat on at my house. Land storage there is free, I'll be about 30 seconds from the boat, and when I'm done, I can sell the trailer and recoup some of my "storage" expense, something not possible if you rent yard space an hour and $30 bucks in truck gas from your house. Not having to travel to the boat has huge benefits besides just the greater net work time. All of my woodworking and other tools are right next to the boat, and my neighbors are nearby when it is time for heavy lifting! We keep vascillating between buying another airplane (not a second one, rather a replacement for the one we sold last) and building one. Rebuilding a boat would be about one-third of the cost in both time and money -- and it comes with a beer fridge and a toilet.
Regarding the shipping distance, it is about 200 miles. I got the dollar amount from the Yachtworld "Ship it" button in the ad. I asked for firm quotes from uShip today, but haven't received any back.
Curiously, I haven't heard from the Moneta Tricab broker today either. I asked him what "new engines with warranties" means, what parts they replaced in the overhaul, etc. I also asked to speak to the buyers of the two other tricabs that they said they remodeled and sold already.
* a name for the boat just lept into my head: Sea Note. Okay, might be corny, but the the Mrs. didn't endorse For Play, Four Play (we have two kids), or Trojan Worrier (a holdover from before I, umm, went to the urologist).