⚡ Jon Boat Bass Setup Checklist
- Rod holders — keep rigs ready without tangles
- Trolling motor — silent approach is everything in shallow water
- Fish finder — even a basic unit changes how you fish structure
- Shallow water anchor — hold position without spooking fish
- Portable livewell — keep bait or tournament fish alive
Here’s something most bass anglers don’t realize: a jon boat is often better than a bass boat in shallow water. You can idle into 8 inches of water, slip under overhanging brush, and get to spots a fiberglass rig can’t touch. The fish in those places don’t see much pressure — and it shows.
I’ve caught limits of largemouth out of flooded timber and creek channels that tournament boats can’t reach. The key is setting your jon boat up right and knowing where shallow-water bass hold in different seasons.
Setting Up Your Jon Boat for Bass Fishing
Rod Holders
Start with flush-mount or clamp-on rod holders on both sides of the boat. You want 3–4 rigs ready to go — a Texas-rigged worm, a swim jig, a topwater, and a shaky head. When you’re working a stretch of bank, being able to swap rigs without digging around your boat means you fish more and miss less.
Trolling Motor
A Minn Kota or Newport Vessels trolling motor mounted on the bow transforms a jon boat into a legitimate fishing machine. 45–55 lb thrust handles most river and lake current. Foot-control models let you steer while keeping both hands on the rod. Cut the big motor well short of your spot and ease in on the trolling motor — you’ll catch far more fish.
Fish Finder
Even a basic Garmin Striker 4 mounted to the gunwale changes how you fish. You’ll spot the depth change at the end of a point, see the fallen tree 15 feet ahead, find where the creek channel swings tight to the bank. That’s where the fish are — and without a finder, you’re guessing.
Shallow Water Anchor
A push pole or spike anchor lets you lock onto a productive piece of structure without drifting off. Stake out on a good lay-down or grass edge and work it thoroughly before moving. Jon boat anglers who drift past good cover catch a fraction of what they should.
Where to Find Shallow Bass from a Jon Boat
Spring (Pre-Spawn and Spawn)
Bass push shallow to warm up and spawn as water temps reach the mid-50s to 60s. Look for the first major flat or pocket inside a creek arm. Work squarebill crankbaits over hard bottom and chunk-and-wind spinnerbaits along grass edges.
Summer (Early Morning and Late Evening)
Hot summer bass push to shade and shallow structure early and late. Topwaters at first light — Zara Spook or Whopper Plopper — along the edge of grass beds or over submerged timber. By 9am, flip a Texas-rigged Senko into shade and slow down.
Fall (Feed-Up Period)
Fall is the best bass fishing of the year from a jon boat. Bass gorge on shad pushing shallow. Run a white or chartreuse swim jig along the shad-colored points and you’ll find stacked fish.
The 3 Baits That Cover Shallow Water Bass
Get Your Jon Boat Set Up Right
A trolling motor and a basic fish finder are the two upgrades that make the biggest difference. Add rod holders and you’re fishing at a whole different level.
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