years ago when I first mentioned wanting a boat my father in law tried to talk me out of it telling me people only take their boat out a couple of times per year if that, and that they will always sit and rot in the end. He suggested for the very few times I would go out, I should just hire a guide and pay someone to take me out on their boat.
well lets say a fishing guide cost $250 per trip, and for fun lets say I use 20 gallons of gas per trip, thats $80. plus a launch fee, $20. if I round my personal costs up, I still save $150 / trip using my boat, and this year that was 30 trips...
30 x $150 per trip = that's $4500 savings
of course there is maintenance. "winterization", a new relay for the trim, a little caulk, new downrigger wire. lets round up and say $2k for fun.
still at plus $2500.
except my wife joined me on probably 20 of those trips. there's another $3k.
minus my boat payment (gasp, I am one of those who borrowed), I figure buying a C-dory so far has netted me a gain of around $5,000 this summer just for owning the darn thing. after a few years I could give it a way and make a profit
economics are all point of view
you must remember when you invest, or dont invest, the opportunity costs of where you put your money. Had I not bought the boat, I'd have missed out on a substantial amount of adventuring, can't get last summer back to do again!
also, there is compounding interest to be had on adventuring. You see, just like $5k sitting at 5% interest over 20 years, my adventuring gains interest each year as my experience and bravery takes me further and further beyond home port. have to start investing in adventure young to net the big gains.
anchorout":206s2p7m said:
In 1995 we bought a 33ft sailboat for $29,000. We cruised the Caribbean down to Venezuela and back for 4 years, and sold the boat for $29,000. Yes, there were maintenance costs and an engine replacement, but we averaged $1,100 per month for everything, gas, rental cars, food, rum (lots of rum),.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FTi40w0nLgo