Wel that's what I'm thinking...people in the midstates might have either run
them into the ground - so to speak - and replaced them long ago - or they're
not inclined to replace them at all.
On our little lake there were at least 5 as of 1970...so people were buying
them.
It's just interesting to observe.
P.
On Tue, Mar 23, 2010 at 5:05 PM, Lee Shuster <Lee.Shuster@...>wrote:
> Perhaps the demographics of Left/Right Coasts were better able to afford
> $4,000 - $5,000 boats in the Sixties?
> Or maybe the inland lakers just know a good thing when they see it and hang
> onto them longer?
>
> Lee
>
> ------------------------------
> *From:* omc-boats-bounces@... [mailto:
> omc-boats-bounces@...] *On Behalf Of *Peter Crowl
> *Sent:* Tuesday, March 23, 2010 4:45 PM
> *To:* omc-boats@...
> *Subject:* [OMC-Boats] '66 Sportsman - in the middle of nowhere
>
> Well - maybe not nowhere - but the middle of Oregon is pretty close.
> http://medford.craigslist.org/boa/1651663545.html
> Sounds like a '66 Sportsman for $500.
> It's interesting to watch the geographic clusters isn't it? Seeing a number
> in the Pacific NW, the middle of Oregon, more than a few in OK, NY/NJ.
> I'm surprised by the lack of boats coming up in WI, IL, MN.
>
> Peter
> Stuck in the Middle
> Denver
>
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>
>
Received on Tuesday, 23 March 2010
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