Actually I was wrong about not learning, it does have an exhaust temperature sensor so it most likely uses that sensor to help keep air/fuel mixture in the ballpark.
You sucked the engine of oil, I think you are referring to the rotary valve cavity. There are two oil lines, on at the bottom of the crankcase on the port side and one higher near the top of the crankcase on the starboard side. This cavity is a gear box to drive the rotary intake valve, there's a gear on the crankshaft and a driven gear on the RV shaft. These gears run in an oil bath.
I would have opened the oil pump lever arm to about the 50% position while idling on trailer in water to purge the old oil and any air bubbles in the lines, get the new oil flowing through and confirm the oil injection was happy. (Mosquito fogging mode)
Since you saw clumps, was your oil strainer full of goop? I'd keep an eye on that till I was sure no more clumps were in the system.
If you run the ski around at puttering speeds, your plugs will be more liable to not run hot enough to keep them from carbon fouling, and the oiling system doesn't inject much, almost zero oil at idle. This is why I suggest putting the ski in mosquito fogging mode to confirm the injection is working, then go ride normally and check the oil strainer occasionally(after a couple of hours running) to make sure it's not plugging up with any clumps. You can be the judge of how lump-free your ski is.