Boat is located on Lake Lanier. Equipped with a humminbird helix 7 with side imaging and down imaging. Has 2 cruising seats and can drop the fishing seats for 2 additional cruising seats. Has a foot pedal trolling motor.
Willing to provide a large yeti cooler for an additional fee.
Also willing to provide fishing poles and tackle for another additional fee.
Boat comes with life jackets.
2 large storage compartments and 2 small storage compartments.
9 gallon live well for storing fish or bait.
Boat Rental Add-Ons & Pricing
Cooler / Ice Chest – Large YETI cooler. $40 per booking
Fishing Gear – 4 fishing poles ready to use! Includes starter tackle for bass. $40 per booking
Lake Lanier is one of the best spots for bass fishing in Georgia. The lake covers 38,000 acres with over 690 miles of shoreline, offering plenty of structure and deep water that bass love. Whether you're after spotted bass or largemouth bass, there's great fishing year-round.
Bass Species in Lake Lanier
The lake is best known for its spotted bass, which thrive in the deep, clear water. These bass are aggressive fighters and can grow over five pounds. They like hanging around rocky ledges, brush piles, and deep drop-offs. Largemouth bass are also here. They stay in shallow areas, especially near docks, grass beds, and submerged trees.
Best Times to Fish for Bass
Spring (March-May): Bass move into shallow water to spawn. Great time to throw soft plastics, spinnerbaits, and crankbaits near rocky banks and docks.
Summer (June-August): As the water heats up, bass move deeper. Use deep-diving crankbaits, drop-shot rigs, and jigs around brush piles and humps.
Fall (September-November): Cooler temperatures bring bass back to shallower waters. Topwater baits, swimbaits, and jerkbaits work great as they chase baitfish.
Winter (December-February): Bass slow down, but deep-water fishing with jigging spoons, finesse jigs, and shaky heads can still get bites. Look for them near deep rock structures.