A Little Experience >>> Updated 1236 Hours
Your Lancer is a PowerSailor as I recall. In order for them to achieve planing speed, they have a smallish keel and elliptical rudder. At least my Dad's 29 did. I found that the boat sailed pretty well in light air as a result and was very good on a reach in heavier winds (assuming the engine was raised). However, the trade off is that it would stall in a tack pretty easily in light air. What I did was to crack off first to build boat speed, and then bring it through, being careful not to hard over too quickly (to avoid stalling the rudder) and then to let the jib carry the bow through by letting it backwind. Also, I found a similar problem when docking in that the outboard would stall the rudder in reverse. The key seemed to be to have enough way on to assure rudder response and be sure the boat was lined up before hitting reverse. And, when backing, to be sure you were lined up, give it lots of reverse throttle to get way on and then cut it to let the rudder take over. The other thing I noticed was that when you were really powering on a reach, I had to be sure I didn't heel too much or I would risk losing rudder control.
All in all, these things are just quirks and managable. if you sail it like a cat, it makes more sense and manuvering under power is much like a single-engine trawler.
Oops: I was thinking of Brian's boat when I wrote this and didn't notice you had not specified this was a PowerSailer. If it is, the points should be valid. However, they may not be with the trailerable 25 with the step-in keel. Then again, since it's a shoal draft and smallish rudder too, it may just be relevent.
Brian: did you move the boat to Oceanside already?