Your Ideal Alaskan Boat

Rich M

WKR
Joined
Jun 14, 2017
Messages
5,667
Location
Orlando
Xmas Red.1.jpg

85 yo dad w big redfish - blurred photo and reversed background. You can see the spot lock on there. We put a deck between the split bench and the one forward.

I've had it out in 4-6s and question my sanity but they only give us a 1-day red snapper season and well, my fav fish. Trim the bow up and go slow. It can handle water that will rattle yer bones. As with any rivetted boat - try not to slap it too much, keep the rivets tight.

We chose the SSV-18 after seeing how much the AK folks and lodges use the SSV-16 and SSV-18s. The 60 hp is a tiller. Supposed to be my retirement boat - little bit of everything from inshore rivers to offshore reefs.

The boat does the same with 4 200#+ folks in it as it does with just me - planes easy, cruises at 16-20 mph without any strain and is pretty easy on the gas. A 50 hp would be fine. Top end would be about 30 mph with 4 bladed prop. We run a mid-type prop. Get up on plane slower and maintain it more easily vs a 3 blade with speed in mind.

They may have some better options in AK. I don't like the weight of the open boats with full floor. But that's me. If I could get a 20 ft version of the SSV-18 with bellybutton deep sides, I would in a heartbeat.
 
Joined
Dec 13, 2023
Messages
480
Ideal? Guess that is a matter of semantics!
If you end up in a "fishing village", just wait until you get up there.
As I understand it, there's a pretty good chance there will be a fair to middling "used" market or folks willing to part with what they have.
Do your research. If you're good with your hands, buy something you can customize into something you want!.

If I were moving to Alaska, my #1 goal would be Kodiak.
Second, any "fishing" village.
My ideal boat would have a heated "cabin". Size at least 20 foot.
 
Top