A Boat Built to Be the Whole Party
The vessel is a 2022 double-decker, 30 feet long, powered by a 140-horsepower outboard that gets it cruising at up to 25 knots between stops. It holds up to twelve guests comfortably, with a bow and aft sundeck, a shaded bimini section, a swim platform off the back, and — the part everyone actually asks about — a slide connecting the top deck straight down into the water. There's a full bathroom on board too, which matters more than people expect once a four-hour trip is underway.
A U.S. Coast Guard certified captain runs the boat the entire time, so there's no boating license required and nobody in the group has to sit out the fun to focus on driving.
Everything's Already Handled
What separates this from a standard rental is what's already on the boat before the group even steps aboard: two large Yeti coolers packed with ice, a full set of sandbar toys and games, a giant floating lily pad big enough for several people at once, and a Bluetooth stereo system with outdoor speakers and LED lighting for whenever the trip runs into the evening. Fuel is included in the price, not tacked on after. The group just needs to bring food, drinks, and towels — everything else is already on board.
Where the Day Actually Goes
Trips run out to the well-known stops around Tampa Bay's barrier islands — Johns Pass Sandbar, Shell Key, and the waterways around Fort DeSoto and Tierra Verde are regular destinations, along with waterfront restaurants and bars for groups who want to dock somewhere and eat. Dolphins and manatees turn up often enough on these routes that spotting one has become part of the normal trip rather than a rare bonus.
Multiple pickup points across Madeira Beach, Treasure Island, and St. Pete Beach mean groups can usually start close to wherever they're already staying instead of driving across town first.
Booking It
Charters run anywhere from two to eight hours, with four hours being the most common length — enough time to hit a sandbar, cruise the waterways, and still have room for a stop at a waterfront spot on the way back. Longer charters give groups more flexibility to island-hop rather than committing to one stop for the whole day.
However long the trip runs, the setup stays the same: show up, get on the boat, and let someone else worry about the driving, the coolers, and the fuel.
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