Dear Shaggy Frog,
While I remain largely incurious about your handle, I must say that this is something of a hairy issue. Here's why. I work with the boost libraries day in and day out. They're fantastic, and make innumerable tasks way easier. But I must emphasis that if you use them, you need to use a profiler. Some of the really nice portions of it tend to be a bit slow, and you should definitely read up on best-practices before using certain parts like, say, transform iterators. Boost, though, is worth mentioning because it does make an effort to supply some pretty powerful pieces of abstraction that are almost foreign in the ++cverse.
However, Boost, and other frameworks like it, are not snakeoil. They rock. People who rock use them. People who rock work on them. For more specialized tasks, I'd need to know more about your problem domain. However, one other tool that's really excellent is SWIG, which will let you bundle up any hunk of portable C code into a library that's... well.... accessible.
As for bloat, a lot of that is going to go away when C++0x moves to the standard, thanks to variadic templates, and a number of similar pieces of cleverness. Honestly, I'm tired of people yelling about The Terrors Of Templates. Perhaps six years ago they were a danger due to poor compiler support, but these days, they're part of the language. They live under almost every piece of generic code you touch. Projects like CLang are hammering the very last nails into this coffin as we speak. They aren't a fad anymore. They aren't a magical solution. No one still thinks that. No one you should hire, anyway.
The future approaches. Do you need a Boost?