- Joined
- Jun 5, 2020
- Messages
- 1,289
- Reaction score
- 602
- Points
- 113
- Age
- 62
- Location
- Santa Cruz Mountains, CA
- Website
- mcvoy.com
- Model
- Seafarer
While I absolutely adore my 228, I have been going out chasing tuna in a 271 Canyon, hate the center console in our snotty Pacific but love that 9000 pound hull that wants to stay planted. 232 Gulfstream is too small, I wish they still made the 28? Sailfish but they don't, so Marlin is the choice for me, I'm completely sold on the walk around design for our cold rough ocean. The 228 is great but it is a fair weather friend, you have to pick your days. What that 271 taught me is you can go out in conditions that the 228 would hate, have to slow down on every swell, the 271 came 53 miles home in 7'@10s with wind chop on top of that at 24 knots. My guy got on the throttle twice in 53 miles, both times to piss. 2.5 hour ride in his boat that would be a 5+ hour ride in the 228.
That opened my eyes to the fact that bigger opens up the ocean, you can go fish on days that I'd stay home in the 228. I *love* to fish so....
I'm pretty sure I've mumbled about this before, what has changed is my wife is supportive. As is my business partner (DM me if you need to know why that is important). I'm at the point where I have the green light to buy a new Marlin.
Which brings me to the logistics, and they give me pause because there is a lot I don't know. I can trailer the 228 home, I can not trailer even a 236 fisherman home, my road is tiny and twisty. So the Marlin would have to live in a slip. All of my questions are about that.
Can Marlin live in a salt water slip year around? My 271 friend says no, he pulls his boat out in October and it doesn't go back in until April.
How often do you have to pull the boat out to have it cleaned? He pulls his at least monthly and has work done on it, is that normal?
I'm just trying to wrap my head around what it is like to have boat in a slip, what work you have to do, etc.
That opened my eyes to the fact that bigger opens up the ocean, you can go fish on days that I'd stay home in the 228. I *love* to fish so....
I'm pretty sure I've mumbled about this before, what has changed is my wife is supportive. As is my business partner (DM me if you need to know why that is important). I'm at the point where I have the green light to buy a new Marlin.
Which brings me to the logistics, and they give me pause because there is a lot I don't know. I can trailer the 228 home, I can not trailer even a 236 fisherman home, my road is tiny and twisty. So the Marlin would have to live in a slip. All of my questions are about that.
Can Marlin live in a salt water slip year around? My 271 friend says no, he pulls his boat out in October and it doesn't go back in until April.
How often do you have to pull the boat out to have it cleaned? He pulls his at least monthly and has work done on it, is that normal?
I'm just trying to wrap my head around what it is like to have boat in a slip, what work you have to do, etc.