I’ve visited both the docks and the exhibit hall now and there wasn’t much to interest me from a trawler perspective.
Most of the boats afloat are go-fast pleasure palaces, many of them with cheesy euro-style interiors full of shoddy join work and sharp corners with no hand holds and lots of fabric upholstery that you know is going to look ratty in a few years. There were boats I just couldn’t figure out like the Greenline and the Apollonian with two big engines and tiny fuel tanks that wouldn’t get you past Nanaimo at their advertised cruising speed. I literally couldn’t get an answer about range from the Greenline rep.
The North Pacific guys had a nice boat for its target use and there was a pretty ten year old Krogan that wasn’t for sale. The Aspen cats are clever and the way Ranger managed to shoehorn a basement with a laundry and a freezer under the hydraulically lifting dinette in their new 43 was impressive, though not impressive enough to overlook the iffy fit and finish and the IPS drives.
The exhibit hall was 95% devoted to ski and fishing boats, personal watercraft, and related kit. Very little to interest a long range cruiser. I see more cool new stuff for our set on an average trip to Fisheries Supply than I did at the show. Latest stabilisation tech, solar and power systems, nav and comm electronics, pick any product category that people tend to chat about on these forums, mostly wasn’t there.
Despite the overall disappointment, I was glad to have the opportunity to make a late entry in the “most creative uses for Mantus rail clamps” that their rep told me about. (See my rescue block and tackle setup below). And I did pry out of the Aspen Cat guy that they have some preliminary drawings for 45 and 50+ foot versions floating around, though no current plans to move to production. So not a completely wasted trip.