A little late here but I wanted to share some of my thoughts after having owned a boat for 1 season.
Last May I purchased a 2004 Bayliner 175 (3.0L, Alpha drive). The boat was in great shape, I took it for a test run and it ran like a charm. So I decided to take the leap, bought it, towed it home and the season was under way.
Most of my boating is done in Lake St-Louis off the shore of Montreal ? this lake is basically a widening of the St Lawrence river between the Lachine Rapids and power dam/islands in the west. It?s a nice lake, the fishing is great but gets very shallow in the most bizarre places. I was lucky enough to secure a spot at a little fishermans marina to leave the boat while not in use. The marina has individual slips for each boat and is pretty secure. Well worth the $400 for the season and sure beat towing, waiting in line at the ramp, hoping for a parking spot etc.
The boat came with a nice bimini, almost new as well as a travel tarp. One thing I did not plan for was a custom snap on mooring covers ? I was under the impression I could pick one up on the internet or at some marina but boy was I wrong ? the set of 2 covers ended up costing me $600 and took 2 weeks to make. The fit well though and the boat stayed bone dry while not in use.
If I were buying a boat just for me (and my son) I probably would have picked up a nice princecraft or some other fishing boat make with a big outboard on the back. But I compromised due to the fact that my wife wanted something the whole family could enjoy?tubing, cruising etc.
Another surprise to me was how choppy the lake actually can get and how a small boat like this gets batted around in the wakes of 30 foot yachts and other big waves. I had been out with a buddy lots of times in the past but his big aluminum pricecraft was much more stable than m little bayliner. Didn?t take long for me to realize when not to venture out and how to ride the wakes.
We also took the boat to one of our favorite campgrounds that has a super boating lake. This was almost a disaster due to the fact that the launch was sand and I tow with a Sienna (less than ideal) ? there was no way the boot was going in the water far enough to come off the trailer with my sienna ? thankfully a great guy offered to launch it with his Ford ?Raptor? ? I think I know what I need after the sienna. He was also around to pull it out for us. We burned up 4 tanks of gas in three days.
I spent a lot of time agonizing over an I/O or an Outboard ? I don?t want to turn this into a discussion about which is better but it seems to me like the I/O requires a lot more maintenance. I am currently contemplating my spring maintenance. I will do the impeller since I have no idea when it was changed but now also wonder if I should change the output shaft bearing, bellows etc?There seems to be a fair number of potential fail points on this sort of setup compared to an outboard?Winterizing is also a lot more of a pain with an I/O than an Outboard.
I will probably keep this boat for one more season, see how much we use it and then upgrade. I would like something a bit larger and possibly an aluminum fishing style with an outboard. One thing I do know is that for anything bigger I will need a bigger/more suitable tow vehicle. This is something important to keep in mind.
I figure we have about 3.5 more months before we can put the boat back in the water?
Some pics attached sum up much of our first season....
Last May I purchased a 2004 Bayliner 175 (3.0L, Alpha drive). The boat was in great shape, I took it for a test run and it ran like a charm. So I decided to take the leap, bought it, towed it home and the season was under way.
Most of my boating is done in Lake St-Louis off the shore of Montreal ? this lake is basically a widening of the St Lawrence river between the Lachine Rapids and power dam/islands in the west. It?s a nice lake, the fishing is great but gets very shallow in the most bizarre places. I was lucky enough to secure a spot at a little fishermans marina to leave the boat while not in use. The marina has individual slips for each boat and is pretty secure. Well worth the $400 for the season and sure beat towing, waiting in line at the ramp, hoping for a parking spot etc.
The boat came with a nice bimini, almost new as well as a travel tarp. One thing I did not plan for was a custom snap on mooring covers ? I was under the impression I could pick one up on the internet or at some marina but boy was I wrong ? the set of 2 covers ended up costing me $600 and took 2 weeks to make. The fit well though and the boat stayed bone dry while not in use.
If I were buying a boat just for me (and my son) I probably would have picked up a nice princecraft or some other fishing boat make with a big outboard on the back. But I compromised due to the fact that my wife wanted something the whole family could enjoy?tubing, cruising etc.
Another surprise to me was how choppy the lake actually can get and how a small boat like this gets batted around in the wakes of 30 foot yachts and other big waves. I had been out with a buddy lots of times in the past but his big aluminum pricecraft was much more stable than m little bayliner. Didn?t take long for me to realize when not to venture out and how to ride the wakes.
We also took the boat to one of our favorite campgrounds that has a super boating lake. This was almost a disaster due to the fact that the launch was sand and I tow with a Sienna (less than ideal) ? there was no way the boot was going in the water far enough to come off the trailer with my sienna ? thankfully a great guy offered to launch it with his Ford ?Raptor? ? I think I know what I need after the sienna. He was also around to pull it out for us. We burned up 4 tanks of gas in three days.
I spent a lot of time agonizing over an I/O or an Outboard ? I don?t want to turn this into a discussion about which is better but it seems to me like the I/O requires a lot more maintenance. I am currently contemplating my spring maintenance. I will do the impeller since I have no idea when it was changed but now also wonder if I should change the output shaft bearing, bellows etc?There seems to be a fair number of potential fail points on this sort of setup compared to an outboard?Winterizing is also a lot more of a pain with an I/O than an Outboard.
I will probably keep this boat for one more season, see how much we use it and then upgrade. I would like something a bit larger and possibly an aluminum fishing style with an outboard. One thing I do know is that for anything bigger I will need a bigger/more suitable tow vehicle. This is something important to keep in mind.
I figure we have about 3.5 more months before we can put the boat back in the water?
Some pics attached sum up much of our first season....
Attachments
Last edited: