Hey, small papas to be lost in the midst of another awesome roundup, Powell pics, etc. but I wanted to give you guys the stats on our nine-night, 8.5 lake day trip to Havascrew. One day was on our friends' Centurion Avalanche.
29.7 engine hours, 98.9 gallons for 3.33 GPH. This was a mix of no-wake zone idling, 11-people cruising, small crew ballasted, some nice 25 mph cruising and more high 30's cruising than we've done before. On a side note, the VERY best way to finish a day at Havasu is to take the last wakeboarding set down at the dam, then race like hell all the way back to town (15 or 18 miles) to try to beat the darkness. We really burned some fuel one night :-) That day our Centurion buddy (350 Magnum) burned 22 gallons. We did 30 gallons over the three days including that day.
Fest, after having a boatfull for several of the days, I see why a HUMONGOUS 247 might be WAY more comfortable than our v-drive Epics. Trying to maneuver all the stuff (anchors, ice chests, chests, kids, boards, lunch, bags, etc.....was pretty much non stop work for me. We've got a 7-month old so everybody's kinda on tip toes while he's cruising around the boat. What a friggin trooper he was - our best river kid yet. He's like me though - if I start fussing, she's just got to whip out the boob and it's all good.
I learned that there is a sort of steering in reverse - by moving the wheel you can get either more or less right turn. Still suck for sure, even after ~200 hours. At this point I just know the situations I don't want to get into - but once in them, still can't get out. I've learned though there's not much wrong besides losing style points for putting her in neutral instead of trying to force a bad situation.
Anyhoo, on with the saga. Got a new board finally - 2006 CWB Flame 141 with 2006 Hinge tech Torqs. Compared to my old board, this thing's got some serious pop. Maybe not Parks pop, but a lot of pop. I've finally had a fun set behind my S22 without ballast. Put that thing on edge, stand tall and wham! Then again, with added length, width, rocker type and amount, different tail shapes and riding finless, there's a lot to learn, or relearn. Fun pop, but sent me back to basics. Still prefer the ride with at least the 750 in the center of the boat.
Best of all, no injuries, no boat damage, no fighting, no mechanical issues whatsoever. Once again, our monster bimini kept us fresh for nine days inthe Arizona desert. The whole aft cockpit's covered at noon.
Will post a few pics soon. Includinga real life ram.
I love my Epic.