glacierbaze
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2012
- Messages
- 2,485
- Reaction score
- 644
- Points
- 113
- Age
- 75
- Model
- Seafarer
Fishing in the Pacific NW is a lot different than Florida. It's almost all slow trolling for salmon. The typical setup is 2 downriggers mounted near the stern. That allows 4 rods to be fished if each rigger has 2 rod holders and the lines are stacked both high and low on the wire. Because of strong currents, stacking is sometimes not a good idea, so 2 rods are all that get run. The Grady with the pilot house has an additional downrigger mount on the transom. That's a better setup than stacking multiple rods on the same downrigger.
Fishing is done with long 2-piece rods that fit easily under the gunwales. There is no need for multiple pitch rods, dredges, outriggers, etc. Other than slow trolling for salmon, bottom fishing is done almost exclusively with jigs. Bait is rarely used except for halibut. And they are only available in certain areas.
I was on a 23’ Parker at the Atlantic City Boat Show a few weeks ago and also noted the short gunnels. The thing that really surprised me though was the lack of under deck storage and/or fish boxes in the deck. The same style boat in the Northstar seemed to have a much better layout.Agree 100%. I got to go out and fish on one quite a few years back in the gulf. My knees were sore from leaning against the bolsters and having to support myself from hyperextending my knees backwards. I'm 6'2" and had to duck going into the cabin before stepping down on the 2320. The cockpit area in the back for fishing was massive though for a 23' boat. I appreciated being able to go out on it and experience it. I still like the look of the Parker, but very happy with the Grady.
I definitely like the look and lines of your pilothouse. It flows with the boat so much more than the others that look like they just put a box with windows on top of their boat.Here is my pilot house that a local fabricator did for me, Fishing northern California in cold foggy weather for glass Windows and side sliding windows on those hot days enough rod holders mounts for antenna nets radar Dome and tubing to hide all electrical wiring and underneath netting to put clothing or lifejackets perfect for my application!
Getting rid of the isinglass that I despise personally the safety factor of having a full windshield is well worth the expense of having full view of what’s in front of me and not hitting any debris .
And was able to sell the original windshield to justify the cost.
From this angle it doesn't look too bad but it still looks a bit funky, out of place or disproportional to the rest of the boat... almost like it's too tall or something. I used to be on the Arima owners forum before when I had my Arima and then on my way out I think is when that guy started to make them. I stopped going to the Arima owners website as their members were all basically drinking the Kool-aid as well as their admin and moderators had favorites and were so politically left leaning that it was ridiculous. And they knew that I wasn't, so they definitely tried pushing me out for a long time. I loved how my 21' Sea Ranger had a ton of open room in the back for fishing and that it did fairly well with regards to fuel economy. I couldn't stand the pounding though that you'd get when going through 1-2' chop and the boat sat so low that you'd get waves and spray over the windshield or the sides of the boat. Any boat is great on a perfect day with perfect weather conditions and so forth but the Puget Sound during the tide change and when it gets windy can get a little nasty. There were several times where we would be fishing in Edmonds and have to drive the boat back to the south end of Whidbey Island where our cabin is and you'd have chop all the way back for 15+ miles. You'd either have to slow down to 15 mph or so because anything more was brutal, or if you didn't have the time to go slow you'd have to just deal with it. It wasn't more than a couple of trips out there and dealing with that to where I realized it wasn't the boat for me. My 228 Seafarer is night and day different with regards to ride quality and comfort, and is Imo a much better suited boat for the Puget Sound. Of which I even sold my Arima for $1k more than what I bought my Grady for, so I'll put that towards the fuel and other expenses, and I'll gladly spend a little bit more on fuel to be more comfortable and dry.Yep yep! He's got pantographic wipers on there too and really nice window from Motion in Vancouver, WA. Matches the squareness of the old Grady's like how he delete the front windows too. I think the newer rounded top caps of the 228 would need some more curves.
Found the same boat on an expired classified section in Victoria. https://www.usedvictoria.com/power-boats/33442311/photos?i=0
Agreed about the Arima's Mustang. Did you see there's a guy making custom pilothouse's for Arimas on Camano Island. They boat right on. I had one too. There obviously really flat bottom (by design). Made to be powered by small motors to be economical. Design has barely change since '84! Cult following is nuts right. Perfect for the Sound though. I've owned worse boats though!
Defiance obviously a totally different design. They own Allied too with is like a tank of an aluminum boat. Wouldn't mind a Defiance San Juan or Admiral. I think they've taken what Parker started and improved it. No wood, longer warranty etc. Would be interesting to go off shore in a Grady, Parker and a Defiance (all 22's) to test the ride.
glacierbaze he built it to the same lines as original windshield frame did not have to do any additional glass work. And it did have a curved angled windshield . The fabricator and myself was very happily surprised how beefy the the original fiberglass wooden area where the windshield and pilot house mounted, he has built hundreds of pilot houses multiple different manufacturers of boats and has never seen one as beefy as Grady White !JJMag, did he build it to the same line that the original windshield frame attached to, or was there some glass work below the house addition? Not sure if your boat had the curved, or the angled windshield.