Left Rehoboth Bay Delaware on Saturday morning and pulled into Portland, Maine harbor at dusk Sunday evening. What a great boat bought from a great guy.
Thanks, We went thru the canal after fueling at Kingman Marina and yes it was a bit lumpy before entering the canal. The long sound wasn’t too bad.Congrats - Sailfish is a great boat. Did you go though Cape Cod or did you just cruise off shore. Saturday was pretty windy around Massachusetts
One heck of a 2 day trip that’s for sure! ….and the boat was flawless, is was thir$ty as expected but well worth it.Congratulations! That's quite a shakedown cruise.
Same exact boat. I'd have had a hard time not stopping to fish!It was a ride, still feeling the excitement …
It was a new boat purchase….we (my captain buddy) and I left Rehoboth Bay in Delaware about 8:30am Saturday morning with almost full tanks in the Grady. We had driven down the day before from South Portland to get this “new Boat” and taker er on a 560 +/- trip to Maine.
Pretty much ran the boat (original low hour engines) at 3800 to 4100 RPM’s doing about 28-31 mph burning between 16 and occasionally 19 gph
The frst stop was along the Jersey coast at Manasquan Inlet for fuel, seemed to be plenty of places to pull into. We put in 127 gallons at almost 500 bucks. It was a busy place on Saturday with lots of boat action. From there we cruised on up to New York (Wow) and on into Long Island sound to New Haven CT. Being Sat night we were happy to find anything that had a hotel nearby. Parked the boat at a Marina (100 bucks) and Ubered 15 minutes to town, got a nice Hotel.
Sunday morning, we are ready to hit it…South Portland here we go. The boat has been flawless to this point so we confidently take off around 8:00am for the Cape Cod Canal and our last fuel stop at Kingman Marina. We took on 136 gallons at 540 bucks and now we are off thru the canal and on a straight course for Cape Elizabeth. Both stops were fuel and go, no drinks or food….pulled in to our slip, South Portland, at dusk. What a 2 day ride, and a ride it was in a very capable boat. Auto pilot was a Big plus! Hopefully I covered it OK, not much of a writer.
I am one happy first time Grady owner.
It would have been nice but we were on a mission, my buddy needed to be home Sunday night.Same exact boat. I'd have had a hard time not stopping to fish!
Thanks for the summary. That sounded exciting. Like I said earlier, you must have cruised right by me near Plum Island.It was a ride, still feeling the excitement …
It was a new boat purchase….we (my captain buddy) and I left Rehoboth Bay in Delaware about 8:30am Saturday morning with almost full tanks in the Grady. We had driven down the day before from South Portland to get this “new Boat” and taker er on a 560 +/- trip to Maine.
Pretty much ran the boat (original low hour engines) at 3800 to 4100 RPM’s doing about 28-31 mph burning between 16 and occasionally 19 gph
The frst stop was along the Jersey coast at Manasquan Inlet for fuel, seemed to be plenty of places to pull into. We put in 127 gallons at almost 500 bucks. It was a busy place on Saturday with lots of boat action. From there we cruised on up to New York (Wow) and on into Long Island sound to New Haven CT. Being Sat night we were happy to find anything that had a hotel nearby. Parked the boat at a Marina (100 bucks) and Ubered 15 minutes to town, got a nice Hotel.
Sunday morning, we are ready to hit it…South Portland here we go. The boat has been flawless to this point so we confidently take off around 8:00am for the Cape Cod Canal and our last fuel stop at Kingman Marina. We took on 136 gallons at 540 bucks and now we are off thru the canal and on a straight course for Cape Elizabeth. Both stops were fuel and go, no drinks or food….pulled in to our slip, South Portland, at dusk. What a 2 day ride, and a ride it was in a very capable boat. Auto pilot was a Big plus! Hopefully I covered it OK, not much of a writer.
I am one happy first time Grady owner.
We must of we were probably a bit off shoreThanks for the summary. That sounded exciting. Like I said earlier, you must have cruised right by me near Plum Island.
On the fuel burn i have 15.25 X 19p 3 blade stainless props on my 225's and that's about what I see in terms of fuel burn. Best cruise for me is 14.8 GPH at 3700 RPM, get's me 29 MPH. WOT, for as often as that's used, is 45 MPH, 56-700 RPM. Being heavy or light doesn't change it all that much, it's more about the conditions. When it's rough and you need to let her eat, it's best not to look at the gauge. My boat and I have been through some horrific conditions together.It would have been nice but we were on a mission, my buddy needed to be home Sunday night.
Great summary, sounds like an awesome trip! I’m making most of the second leg of your trip Friday. Leaving westerly RI heading to the Piscataqua river in a new to me 272 sailfish. Glad to hear it was a smooth ride, I’m timing the canal at slack tide Friday. Any tips or tricks or issues for entering/transiting the canal? I have charts and it plotted out via navionics so far and have done as much research as I can but since you just did it curious if there’s any information I should be aware of.It was a ride, still feeling the excitement …
It was a new boat purchase….we (my captain buddy) and I left Rehoboth Bay in Delaware about 8:30am Saturday morning with almost full tanks in the Grady. We had driven down the day before from South Portland to get this “new Boat” and taker er on a 560 +/- trip to Maine.
Pretty much ran the boat (original low hour engines) at 3800 to 4100 RPM’s doing about 28-31 mph burning between 16 and occasionally 19 gph
The frst stop was along the Jersey coast at Manasquan Inlet for fuel, seemed to be plenty of places to pull into. We put in 127 gallons at almost 500 bucks. It was a busy place on Saturday with lots of boat action. From there we cruised on up to New York (Wow) and on into Long Island sound to New Haven CT. Being Sat night we were happy to find anything that had a hotel nearby. Parked the boat at a Marina (100 bucks) and Ubered 15 minutes to town, got a nice Hotel.
Sunday morning, we are ready to hit it…South Portland here we go. The boat has been flawless to this point so we confidently take off around 8:00am for the Cape Cod Canal and our last fuel stop at Kingman Marina. We took on 136 gallons at 540 bucks and now we are off thru the canal and on a straight course for Cape Elizabeth. Both stops were fuel and go, no drinks or food….pulled in to our slip, South Portland, at dusk. What a 2 day ride, and a ride it was in a very capable boat. Auto pilot was a Big plus! Hopefully I covered it OK, not much of a writer.
I am one happy first time Grady owner.
Great info, I was concerned about the speed limit in the canal, hopefully I can do the same speeds and get through it on the quicker end.The canal was a breeze, to be honest I don’t even remember the tide status. In one of these boats I don’t really think it matters. We followed another boat thru and we were doing about 15-20 mph., sometimes more.
….we kept our Defever 41 up at Great Bay Marine, NH ( great place, great people, loved being there) for 5 years and went back and forth twice a year to our slip in South Portland. Now the Piscataqua river, THAT is one heackmof a journey if you catch the tide at the wrong time although in your boat I don’t think I’d be to concerned.
Hope this helps
I assume you are talking cape cod canal - there is a speed limit technically.Great info, I was concerned about the speed limit in the canal, hopefully I can do the same speeds and get through it on the quicker end.
Im up the river from great bay by about 2 miles but while my moorings getting beefed up I’m keeping it there. It’s a nice spot overall.
Thanks for the info!