Ronnie
Jetboaters Fleet Admiral
- Messages
- 8,775
- Reaction score
- 12,188
- Points
- 667
- Location
- SF Bay Area
- Boat Make
- Yamaha
- Year
- 2010
- Boat Model
- Limited S
- Boat Length
- 24
I took the boat out last Sunday for a few hours. I wanted to be able to tube as soon as we hit the water instead of spend time boating to the destination so I drove to a state park instead of a city ramp. As such I had to cross a toll bridge, in ncal we only pay toll on the big bridges around here (e.g. The bay bridge, golden gate, San Mateo, dunbarton, Benicia, Antioch, etc.) and two stretches of commuter lanes (basically you can get in the fast / diamond lane if you pay a variable fee to do so, the greeter the traffic the higher the fee). Many people pay the tolls with a "fast pass" which is a transponder in the front window that triggers a payment from the user's account as it goes through the toll gate.
Anyway, I didn't have my fast pass that day (there is a limit of two per household and we have four cars), so I paid cash which apparently is a Very rare thing for me to do. I handed the toll taker a $20 bill. When I looked back at the toll taker for change she said "thank you", $20 is what it cost to take tow my boat over the bridge. When I bought my first jet ski (Kawasaki x2 in 1988) the cost to do the same thing was $1 (50 cents for the tow vehicle and 50 cents for the trailer). A few miles down the road is the state park, the launch fee didn't surprise me since I'd been there recently but it was $18. For comparison when I bought my first boat around 2001 the fee was $2. So I was $38 out in fees before I hit the water, silly me for thinking that I would save money or break even because of the cost of gas to get there by boat.
The money doesn't bother me, the fact that I didn't notice until this weekend that the bridge toll had increased so much does. I have become to reliant on the convenience of the fast pass that I never knew what I was being charged. When you use the fast pass you don't see the actual cost as you drive through the toll area, just a sign that says "thank you" (I think) and the transducer beeps. Incidentally, the tolls vary by the number of axels, more axles the higher toll charge. In all instances the vehicles going though the toll booth are photographed as they go through. From these photos the bridge district determines the applicable charge.
Anyway, I didn't have my fast pass that day (there is a limit of two per household and we have four cars), so I paid cash which apparently is a Very rare thing for me to do. I handed the toll taker a $20 bill. When I looked back at the toll taker for change she said "thank you", $20 is what it cost to take tow my boat over the bridge. When I bought my first jet ski (Kawasaki x2 in 1988) the cost to do the same thing was $1 (50 cents for the tow vehicle and 50 cents for the trailer). A few miles down the road is the state park, the launch fee didn't surprise me since I'd been there recently but it was $18. For comparison when I bought my first boat around 2001 the fee was $2. So I was $38 out in fees before I hit the water, silly me for thinking that I would save money or break even because of the cost of gas to get there by boat.
The money doesn't bother me, the fact that I didn't notice until this weekend that the bridge toll had increased so much does. I have become to reliant on the convenience of the fast pass that I never knew what I was being charged. When you use the fast pass you don't see the actual cost as you drive through the toll area, just a sign that says "thank you" (I think) and the transducer beeps. Incidentally, the tolls vary by the number of axels, more axles the higher toll charge. In all instances the vehicles going though the toll booth are photographed as they go through. From these photos the bridge district determines the applicable charge.