Color me ignorant on this one but I had no idea electric outboards were even a thing. Heck, I didn’t know that electric-only fishing was a thing, that is until recently. I had heard of the famed Dixon Lake in California where Dottie, the 23-pound largemouth bass that could have broken the world record, lived. Lake Dixon doesn’t allow you to bring your own boat, instead you have to rent a boat from them rigged with nothing more than a trolling motor. So essentially, that’s an electric-only boat. But that’s nowhere close to what “electric-only” fishing means anymore.
Apparently, electric-only fishing has been a big deal for a really long time and electric-only outboards aren’t new either, with our own Jason Sealock writing a piece in 2017 featuring one of the industry’s front runners in this technology, Pure Watercraft. I also recently learned that Mike Iaconelli, former Bassmaster Classic champion and arguably one of the most influential anglers in the history of the sport of bass fishing even got his start in electric-only fishing.
Ike’s early bass fishing rig was a polyurethane jon boat, outfitted with one trolling motor on the front and another on the back to fish the local lakes around his home in New Jersey that didn’t allow combustion engines. This regulation on certain fisheries, often small man-made lakes created for drinking water, lead to a niche fishing community that has thrived throughout little segments of the country for decades now in areas like Virginia, New Jersey, North Carolina and Georgia.
But recently, this subset of the sport of bass fishing has really taken off, in large part due to advancements in the electric outboard which has added a considerable improvement to the propulsion options from the basic trolling motors used in the past.