- Local time
- 1:17 AM
- User ID
- 4
- Joined
- Dec 3, 2015
- Messages
- 52,954
- Reaction score
- 352,700
- Location
- Banner Springs Tennessee

This is what you want.
When that mfer goes airborne, its gonna be bad.
This is what you want.
Adam, you are definitely a dedicated father. Good for you.Morena E Hoa's.
Home for a night, then back out of town for a soccer tournament for the boy.
Keep safe ay.
I wuz thinkin the same thing...When that mfer goes airborne, its gonna be bad.
LOL!My wife and kids are bugging me for a pontoon boat.
I'm thinking.....nope.
LOL!
We had a 24' pontoon several years ago when the kids were younger. The boy had a jet ski at that time.
He always had at least 4 or 5 friends that would end up at our place, so we took them to the lake and let them take turns tubing behind the jet ski and made sure we fed them something and had a first aid kit to patch them up when they invariably did dumb chit.
Wish I had pictures to go with all those memories. Dont regret it one bit.
Sold that when the boy got his first boat and bought the "Mayfloat".(17' bay boat).
That worked well enough for a few years, but now Bosslady needs something with a bit more open floor plan, so we got the 18' pontoon.
"Vintage" 1987 model.
Got it for $2,000. Probably at $4,500 all in counting repairs, registration, and stuffs now.
I really like it, because I can sleep on it comfortably if I want to stay and fish at night or camp for a day or two.
LOL!
We had a 24' pontoon several years ago when the kids were younger. The boy had a jet ski at that time.
He always had at least 4 or 5 friends that would end up at our place, so we took them to the lake and let them take turns tubing behind the jet ski and made sure we fed them something and had a first aid kit to patch them up when they invariably did dumb chit.
Wish I had pictures to go with all those memories. Dont regret it one bit.
Sold that when the boy got his first boat and bought the "Mayfloat".(17' bay boat).
That worked well enough for a few years, but now Bosslady needs something with a bit more open floor plan, so we got the 18' pontoon.
"Vintage" 1987 model.
Got it for $2,000. Probably at $4,500 all in counting repairs, registration, and stuffs now.
I really like it, because I can sleep on it comfortably if I want to stay and fish at night or camp for a day or two.
The larger boat worked perfect with the kids. Enough room for them and their crap with enough space to still move around. Harder to launch and load, but we always had help.That is exactly what we are looking for.
An 18' is surprisingly "cozy".I think an 18ft would be the right size for us too. Seems like everything for sale around here is 22ft plus.
i got to sleep about 4amGuilty as charged. Slept in to almost 7 this morning. Just finished feeding the animals, and having my first sip of coffee. I guess I needed it from all the slacking I did this week. Slacking makes me tired!
best answer is nopeMy wife and kids are bugging me for a pontoon boat.
I'm thinking.....nope.
here they rent for about 200 bucks for 4 hours plus fuelRent one from a marina for a day, that will cure them of it.
i plan on doing alot of nothing tomorrowI slacked hard today. Worked 12 hours and came home and jumped in the pool for a bit with the kids. Ate dinner, took a shower, and now i’m ready to crash and then do it again tomorrow
The larger boat worked perfect with the kids. Enough room for them and their crap with enough space to still move around. Harder to launch and load, but we always had help.
An 18' is surprisingly "cozy".
Its also noticeably more responsive and nimble on the water, until you have 6 adults on it.
Then it becomes slow and encumbered.
The 24' handled like a barge, and was slower than molasses in the winter, but did so whether it was 2 of us or 10.
If its just going to be you, the wife, and one kid, an 18' or 20' gives you enough room.
Otherwise, go for a longer boat.
Anything over 20' should also have some decent horsepower pushing it.
A 24' with a 40 HP outboard is NOT going to make you happy. Painfully slow and underpowered.
I repowered that one with an 85 HP.
Much better.
The larger boat worked perfect with the kids. Enough room for them and their crap with enough space to still move around. Harder to launch and load, but we always had help.
An 18' is surprisingly "cozy".
Its also noticeably more responsive and nimble on the water, until you have 6 adults on it.
Then it becomes slow and encumbered.
The 24' handled like a barge, and was slower than molasses in the winter, but did so whether it was 2 of us or 10.
If its just going to be you, the wife, and one kid, an 18' or 20' gives you enough room.
Otherwise, go for a longer boat.
Anything over 20' should also have some decent horsepower pushing it.
A 24' with a 40 HP outboard is NOT going to make you happy. Painfully slow and underpowered.
I repowered that one with an 85 HP.
Much better.