Dave wrote:If you want to fish lakes, I would also recommend a Smoker craft in the 16' size. That will allow you plenty of room. I bought mine at the Smoker craft dealer in Everett next to Dagmar's Landing. I paid 1200. for my 12' Alaskan new and I bought my King trailer at Performance Marine in Everett for 700.00. They are a quality built boat that will last you a lifetime if you take care of it. Good luck and let us know what you end up getting.
I'd have to agree. If you're looking for a fishing boat to get out on the water, then a 16' is a great size. You can easily fish 3 or 4 people out of it and still have a bit of room. I had a 12' for years and then stepped up to a 16' Lund. It's only got 15hp but is great for my dad, wife, dog, and me. I even built a front deck for the dog to sit and that has worked out great.
As far as weight, my boat, trailer, engine and gear only weigh about 1000#. I use my Subaru Legacy sedan (2.5L engine, automatic, and AWD) to pull it and it does fine. It'd be nice to have the Subie with the 3.0L 6cylinder for a little more power but the 4 still works fine.
The greatest factors in your first boat buying is going to be:
How much do you want/are you willing to spend?
What are you truly using the boat for? Fishing, waterskiing, tubing, cruising, or all of the above.
Do you need lots of power and bells and whistles or will you be happy with a small engine, tiller steering, simple set up?
What kind of tow vehicle with you be happy with driving on a regular basis?
Remember, no boat will be perfect to fit all of your needs. Shop around and like said above, go to a boat launch and see what others are doing. I've seen a lot of families with boats too $big$ for their needs and the "family outing" turns into WWIII at the launch.
