I have been to several TrawlerFests in both Florida and Maryland over the years. Outside of overpriced and overcrowded seminars, it's pretty much a waste of time and money, IMHO. Way back when, they were good venues but not now. Very few boats to look at.
I'm sorry to hear this. Seems to be a broadly held opinion that TrawlerFest is not great value.
TrawlerFest was started in the later part of the 1990s by Georgs Kolesnikov. An eminantly enigmatic guy, Georgs was a serial publisher and showman. He started the foreunner to TrawlerForum with an email-based list "Voyaging under Power" that morphed into "Trawlers and Trawlering." I recognize a few names on TF to this day (a shout-out to RGANO for example). Along the way, he published a beautifully produced glossy info-magazine for Nordhavn. The guy knew how to generate buzz.
I didn't know Georgs well, but he seemed like the type that liked to start things, not run them so around 2002, Georgs sold TrawlerFest to Jack & Millie Rose, his right-hand team with TrawlerFest. Cheryll, my wife, and I had a great time working with Jack & Millie (and Dennis & Esther - Jack's right-hand-man). But all things come to pass - I was recruited back into Corporate America; Jack & Millie sold to PassageMaker Magazine (PMM).
In hindsight, this sale was a seminal moment for TrawlerFest. Until then, both Georgs and Jack/Millie viewed their customer base as attendees - folks who wrote the check to attend. Attractive content was extremely important so they hired subject matter experts such as Bob Smith (legendary Ford Lehman god) and others, including TF members Psneeld and myself.
The PMM model was grafted off the standard magazine business model: Advertisers are the 'customer' and attendees are the props. While I don't know, I wouldn't be surprised if PMM now received revenue from advertisers to sponsor/teach a seminar. While I wasn't paid to teach seminars, my expenses were paid including airfare (though very few presenters came from outside the immediate area).
I loved doing TrawlerFests and am saddened they have apparently pivoted from an educational event where you could look at boats for sale to a sales-event that oh-by-the-way has infomercial seminars. Maybe I'm naive and it was always like that - it was certainly good for my delivery business just because I met so many people (BTW - my seminars were "Boat Buying 101;" and "Docking & Close Quarter Maneuvers;" and midday dock demo's to bring folks to the docks; and of course inaugural instructor at TrawlerFest University - Bob Smith being the other first wave of 'professors').
I'd like nothing more than for a few folks to push-back on the above. TrawlerFest is a great concept. I wish it was more about the attendees and less about the advdertisers. But I guess thats naive itself.
Peter