Short answer: yes, today can be a solid bass-session at Lymm Dam, provided you tailor your approach to the late-summer conditions and the wind. Here’s how I’d roll it as a bass angler today. 🎣☀️
What the weather is doing now
- Partly cloudy with a comfortable surface temperature around 15°C (59°F).
- Wind around 20 mph means you’ll have chop and movement on the water, which can push baitfish and bass toward windward edges.
- Humidity ~67% and a steady pressure around 996 hPa; visibility decent. In late summer, that combo often translates to active edges and decent topwater or reaction bites early and late in the day.
Where to target on Lymm Dam for bass today
- Focus on weed edges, reed beds, and drop-offs near structure; bass love ambush points where baitfish school, especially when a breeze is pushing bait along the banks.
- Look for shallow bays with some shade or cloud cover; mid-late afternoon can see a shift to deeper edges as the sun climbs.
Tackle and lure plan (late-summer bass tactics)
- Bold, fast-moving options: spinnerbaits and a small to mid-sized lipless crank to locate quickly along weed edges.
- Versatile options: a weighted soft plastic swimbait or a shaky head jig with a craw or shad trailer to probe around structure.
- If you’re delicate and patient: pull a small topwater plug at first light or after a warm spell when the surface is calm enough.
- Line setup: a braided mains, ~15–20 lb, with a fluorocarbon leader for clean hooksets and abrasion resistance around cover.
Weather tips and a quick weather-based plan
- Wind is your ally today. Use it to push baitfish and bass toward shorelines; fan casts along wind-driven edges and keep a tight follow-up with a fast-retrieve cadence.
- Midday, expect bass to pull to slightly deeper, shaded pockets or around drop-offs; switch to a steadier, slow-rolled presentation to coax bites from deeper ambush points.
- If cloud cover increases, you can extend topwater or fast-moving presentations a little longer, especially around dawn or dusk windows.
What the pros say (and where to watch for cues)
- Check these clips to get cues on structure and lure choice around Lymm Dam:
- Even if you’re chasing bass, these clips give you a feel for where fish hold and how banks, weedlines, and pads shape your day.
Useful gear picks (value-oriented)
- Ugly Stik GX2 Spinning Reel and 6' Rod Combo: Product 💰
- Strike Series Medium Action 6'8” Spinning Combo: Product 🧰
- One Bass Rod and Reel Combo (7’ MT): Product 🎣
- KastKing Royale Legend II Spinning Combos: Product 🪄
- KastKing Centron Lite Spinning Reel Combo: Product 🌟
- KastKing Brent Chapman Baitcasting Kit: Product 🧩
Short, practical tip for today: start with a fast-dalliance approach along weed edges (spinnerbait or lipless) to locate active bass, then switch to a slower, deeper approach (swimbait on a weighted jig head) as sun climbs and fish pull to shade or deeper cover. If you get a bite, question your retrieve: a quick twitch, pause, and then a slow roll often triggers more bites on warm afternoons.
Weather-specific tip and summary
- Weather tip: With the ~20 mph breeze and patchy sun, mix your presentations between moving baits and steady-pace plastics to cover both the edge and the deeper edge where fish hold.
- Seasonal weather summary: Late summer at Lymm Dam typically brings warm days, cool nights, and variable wind. Bass tend to feed in dawn/dusk windows and around weedlines during the day; keep your boat position steady and cast to hot spots rather than roaming aimlessly.
Go give it a go today—steady pressure, clean retrieves, and a few well-placed casts could bring you a solid bass grab. Tight lines, and may the bite be with you! 🐟💪











