25' Bennington Tritoon powered by 150 horsepower. Large Bimini top, Bluetooth stereo and lots or spacious seating make a great day on the lake. She seats 13 people plus the captain. Feel free to bring the family or the party. Food and drinks are welcome. Available between 2 hour and 8 hour time slots.
2 hours: 9am, 1130am, 2pm, 430pm or 7pm.
3 hours: 9am, 2pm or 6pm.
4 hours: 930am, 2pm or 430pm.
6 hours: 9am or 2pm.
8 hours: 9am or 930am.
There is a 6' x 18' floating lily pad you can rent for an additional $55. We also have various size coolers for rent and sell ice in the office.
This boat is captained only. You may choose to hire your own captain. We have a list of available captains for your convivence to choose from when you arrive.
Safety equipment is included. Fuel is not included.
For trips 6hr. or more there will be an automatic 18% gratuity off of the boat price.
Fuel Policy: There will be an hourly fuel surcharge of $50 charged on the day of the rental.
The sun is low over Lake Tahoe, casting a soft golden light on the water, smooth as glass. You step onto the boat, and the engine hums to life, a steady pulse beneath your feet. You push off from the dock, and the world feels different out here. The usual noise fades away. The air is cool, crisp, with a hint of pine. The water slips past the hull, and you can hear nothing but the faint swish and the occasional call of a bird overhead. There’s no hurry. Just you, the boat, and the lake.
You might anchor in a quiet cove, drop the anchor, and swim in the cold, clear water. The lake wraps around you, as pure as the silence. The cold cuts through, sharp and invigorating. You float, letting the water hold you, the vastness of the place settling over you. Or, perhaps, you’ll simply drift, letting the boat take you where the current goes, with no destination, no plan. The lake is a mirror, reflecting the sky and the trees, the mountains in the distance. The colors shift with the light, each moment new, each moment fleeting.
The boat moves effortlessly through it all, slicing through the water with a quiet grace, as though it’s part of the land and part of the sky. You pass small islands, their rocky edges barely visible above the surface, and you wonder how many others have seen this same view, these same quiet coves. You might pull up to a secluded beach, perhaps find a place to sit, have a drink, watch the sun climb higher, or begin to set. The hours slip by unnoticed.
There’s no rush to leave. No rush to do anything. The lake becomes a place where time doesn’t matter, where the silence and the movement of the boat, the water, the wind are enough. The mountains are constant, the water never the same. The boat carries you through it, steady, smooth. It’s a simple day. But it’s all the more real for it. In this quiet, you might find something you’ve forgotten. And when it’s time to head back, the lake won’t leave you quickly. It will stay with you, in the stillness.