If motor was fogged last season and the plugs were replaced BEFORE the motor was started this year, the plugs may get fouled. I always start and run the motor on the old plugs in the spring and then change the plugs. Regardless, take a look at the oil pump linkage adjustment.The plugs only have about 5 minutes on them this season in the picture, not sure of that makes a difference or if they would have burned clean already (fogged and sea foamed end of the season). Plugs were replaced last season and gapped (will recheck when I pull them after putting some hours on it Sunday).
It is a 1996 s150txru. I felt she was smoking more at the end of last season but think it was just the cold and humid mornings (but did she tend to blow a little smoke on startup which lends to your running rich theory) but At the dock the other day she didnt smoke really all. Running Ngk plugs (same kind as inside the cowling says and same as previous owner used). I did check the oil linkage and all looked fine, decided not to mess with it as rich is safe.
That motor will smoke more in cold weather and humid weather. The smoke would be white. If blue, it mat have too much oil in the mix and if black, the gas mixture may be too rich.
My 150 is a 2000 and at times it does smoke a lot ( forget about first firing after the winter, I don't even count that!).
The original plus are NKG but the actual part number is what you need to confirm. My motor calls for BR7HS-10 but I think that the new plugs available today have a different number. I am still working on existing stock