You are gettng your boat and that is a great start, and if you have much water around you that should allow you to have a great time on your boat. But, ....getting out with others and traveling their waters with others is fun, ya meet some great folks. Take and draw a 500 mile circle around where you live/store your boat. That opens up much, much great opportunities even for long weekend trips!!
I guess it is sort of like buying a pair of blue jeans,...and not getting a belt or suspenders. When ya get'm out of the wash they are fine for a little while without a belt...but, not long there after,....you get'm "wallered" out a bit...and a belt/suspenders would be great to have. Same thing happens with boats....particuarly if you snoop around on this site much....you will want to go to the events and be with the others. It is a blast!!!
Good point made about getting it worked into your loan but if no loan is involved, but as stated...they are not going down in price. Hauling out for maintenance is not far off unless they are going to perform maintenance on a wash stand at a storage facility. Generally around 20-25 hours on a new motor, then in about 100 hours... and that is just the general motor maintenance. If something breaks, and things often do...what is the agreement you have with the dealership as far as them coming to the boat to fix it?? Ponder a bit on some links and just realize the things that folks get done at their dealership after they have had thier boats out for a good full weekend trip. You will need some work done, and if you do not, you will be one of the first owners in history to not need something fixed. OK...a lot of the time it is minor stuf, and some of us had rather fix it ourselves, or re-work something ourselves to a different standard than the factory QC or dealership QC had....but others do not... You have to be honest with where you will be on this.
Now anyone could just ponder "Wild Blue" travel log over the last ...18ish months....and WOW...only about 95% of that would not have been possible without the trailer, the cat or the Blonde. (Hi!!)....and several other boats on our site too.
In the last 12 months I have been in Pugent Sound waters, Gulf Coast waters, mid-east coast waters in the Carolinas, the Chesapeake Bay NE waters, and much time on the Cumberland River system. Yep, a trailer for me please...and a good one.
If you are going to leave the boat in a slip...check out some other links on this site for bottom paint/epoxy for the bottom of your hull.
Be honest with yourself that this is a new boat, it will need something fixed, it will need regular maintenance...and just have a plan for that if you do not have a trailer. Have a known good maintenance plan...and realize that not all dealerships that are dealerships today, will be a dealership at the time you need your boat work done. Some and/or most of that could be figured out already as to where and how you store your boat.
The Boathouse where I keep one of my boats on a wash stand indoors using fork lifts to put the boat in/out of the water has on site maintenance, and, my motor shop also does "out calls."....but at some point...some time...you will have to take the boat somewhere for some work...more than likely.
Some at our marina have the same type hulls, so 2 or 3 of them "share" the same trailer, or rent it from who ever owns it. There is also maintenance on the trailers too, and you do not want to be the guy who you only hear from when ya need something.
Just something to ponder while waiting on your deal to go thru.
Enjoy your boat and welcome to the C-Brats!
Byrdman