Yep — this is a solid starter bass box 👍 You’ve already got a nice mix of moving baits that cover a lot of water: a spinnerbait, a buzzbait, a frog/topwater, some swimbaits, and a few hard baits. For late spring, that’s a very fishable lineup because bass are often cruising shallows, chasing bait, and getting more willing to eat fast, noisy stuff.
What you’re missing most
If I were building this box out next, I’d add:
- A Whopper Plopper (great call)
- A few soft plastics you can rig weightless or on a Texas rig
- Extra hooks/jigheads in common sizes
- A couple darker color baits for stained water / low light
- A green pumpkin or black-blue creature bait for more natural presentations
Whopper Plopper pick
For a first one, I’d grab a Whopper Plopper 90 or 110.
- 90 = better for smaller water, ponds, and when bass are pressured
- 110 = the most versatile “do-everything” size for bass
- 130 = more of a big-fish / bigger-water bait, and can be a little much if you’re just starting
If you fish ponds, creeks, or smaller lakes, start with the 90. If you want one bait to cover the most situations, get the 110.
Best colors
You already seem to have some good natural and flashy options. For a Whopper Plopper, I’d keep it simple:
- Bone/white = best all-around
- Black = killer at dawn, dusk, and dirty water
- Shad/silver = good in clearer water
How to fish it
- Cast it parallel to banks, weed edges, docks, and laydowns
- Retrieve with a steady pull; don’t overwork it
- Pause only if a fish misses it, then keep it moving
- Best windows are usually early morning, late evening, and cloudy days ☁️
Gear notes
A Whopper Plopper is easiest on 30–50 lb braid with a medium-heavy or heavy rod and a reel that picks up line quickly. If you fish around cover, braid helps you drive the hooks home and keeps the bait walking clean.
About your box overall
I’d say you’re about 75% of the way to a very usable bass box. You’ve got the exciting stuff covered; now just fill in the utility pieces so you can fish more situations without buying random tackle every trip.
If you want, I can help you pick the exact Whopper Plopper size and color based on where you fish — pond, lake, river, or bank fishing. 🎣












