Bass Tactics For Delaware's
Lums Pond
Lums Pond, located just off Rt. # 71, in Kirkwood Delaware, is a
190 acre state park, with a very shallow launching ramp, and has
room for about 25-30 vehicles with trailers in the main lot by the
launching ramp. There is a daily fee at sate parks, or a yearly
pass can be purchased at any of the park offices.

This is a prime location for bass anglers in the spring and summer,
and receives fairly heavy fishing pressure, from weekend anglers
and tournament fisherman. Although it has a lot of pressure, there
are still quite a few big bass in Lums, along with a decent population
of Hybrid Striped Bass. If you follow these steps, you can still
connect with a real trophy in Lums Pond this spring.
Wood Cover
There is quite a lot of wood, laydowns, and cut off stumps in Lums.
Most of the wood is located on the left and right hand sides of
the main lake, right after the beach and docks, about 1000 yards
up from the launching ramp. The first area to try is the laydowns
on the right, as you head up past the beach. This area is overlooked
by a lot of anglers, but is a good location for largemouth\'s in
the two to four pound range. This same area also holds quite a few
Striped Bass hybrids that run around six pounds on average, but
some in the eight and nine pound class have been caught here.

You can't go wrong by flipping a black/blue jig, with either a
blue Uncle Josh Pork trailer, or a Bearpaws trailer. Both have worked
real well flipped into the laydowns along both shores in this area.
The North shore receives the most sunlight in the spring, and as
a result, warms first. I like to use a seven foot, Kistler graphite
rod, with a Shimano Chronarch, spooled with twenty to twenty-five
pound test. Flip all the laydowns in this area, working each one
of the branches moving from the outside in, right up to the shore.
If this area doesn\'t produce right away, move across the lake to
the other laydowns, and work them the same way. When you can\'t
get a hit in this area on the jig, often, you can move off this
area a little farther, and rework the same areas with a 3/8 ounce
Terminator spinnerbait in Golden Shiner, with tandem blades. Make
as much contact with the wood from as many different angles as possible.
Keeping a buzzbait rigged for this area is a good idea, and many
times, repeated casts to the same areas over and over, at different
angles will provoke a reaction strike.
Points and Drop-offs
Although it is common knowledge that bass will stage on drop-offs
and points this time of year, all drop-offs and points aren\'t alike.
Look for drop-offs and points that are nearest to the main channel,
preferably on the North shore, that contain some type of new vegetation
growth under the surface. There are several areas that are eight
and nine feet deep, but the average depth is four feet, with some
of the shoreline much shallower. The water is very stained to muddy,
so the bass will go very shallow to feed. Don\'t be afraid to cast
right up against the shore in the very shallow water. At first glance,
Lums doesn\'t seem to have a lot of grass, algae, or emergent weed
growth, but there is a wide variety of aquatic vegetation under
the surface that hold lots of baitfish, and bass!

One of the best spots to connect with some big largemouth\'s and
hybrids is the sand point and drop-off just across from the dog
training area. Work this area well with a white/chartreuse spinnerbait
and long shad colored minnow baits, such as a Husky Suspend Jerk,
or a Rattlin\' Rogue in blue/chrome,or a Lucky Craft \"Pointer\".
Last year working this point, and the one directly to the north
of the cove with a pier, we caught more than eight bass in the three
to five pound class, with a couple of nice six pound Hybrids thrown
in.
Buzz the Flats
Don't forget the buzzbait in the spring. When the water warms to
sixty to sixty-five degrees, the buzzbait will draw tremendous topwater
explosions on overcast days,and sometimes the whole day. Many times
in April, we started with the buzzbait early in the morning, looking
for active fish, and never switched baits all day. Some days of
twenty to twenty-five fish, are not uncommon at all, with most in
the three to four pound class. The best areas for the buzzbait in
Lums are located on the flats that are adjacent to deep water. A
good fish locator, such as a Lowrance, that is made for shallow
water performance, is a great tool to have when you first start
to explore Lums, as it is one of the larger Delaware Ponds.
Head straight up the lake from the launching ramp until you get
to the upper end of the lake. There will be a cove with a fishing
pier all the way up on the right. Work this area with repetitious
casts using a double-buzz, in black, and a clacker type buzzbait,
such as a Terminator Ball Buster or B&D Klacker buzz, in 1/2
ounce, with a trailer hook. Many times here you will get a lot of
short strikes due to the muddy water. A trailer hook will increase
your hookups greatly. Stay well off shore here, and make as many
as thirty casts, from different directions, before moving on. Make
sure to hesitate just a second when the bass strike, and set the
hook hard. I like to use a 7 foot Lews Crankin stick, or a G.Loomis
Crankin stick with seventeen to twenty pound test for this type
of fishing.
Cover Water
When all of the above methods fail, start covering water. Sometimes
the bass are still a little off shore in the early spring, and covering
water quickly, until you get a strike, is a good idea. The best
lures for this are 1/2 ounce chrome/blue Rattlin\' Rapalas. Position
the boat a little off shore, and cast out to the drop-offs and weedlines,
retrieving it back with a pumping motion, raising your rod from
a 9 to 12 o\'clock position. Make sure the hooks are really sharp.
When you locate the fish, work the area slowly with the lipless
crankbaits, spider grubs, and a 4" Senko."
Follow these tips for Lums Pond this year in the spring, and you
will get a quick start to a "trophy year."
Later in the afternoon, the area directly across the lake from
here contains a lot of overhanging trees, and a lot of stumps. These
stumps can\'t be seen until it\'s too late. So make sure you have
a breakaway mount on your electric motor, and keep the outboard
up out of the water. There is a no-wake policy on Delaware ponds,
but you can use the outboards. The bass in these heavily pressured
areas become conditioned to sounds more easily, as they can\'t rely
so much on sight, due to the muddy water. So keep the trolling motor
on low, and try to avoid any banging around in the boat. I have
caught bass with the trolling motor on, but most of the bass above
five pounds were caught with the trolling motor off.
Keep these things in mind this year at Lums, and you will connect
with the bass you are looking for. Most people get on the water
too late. Start in mid to late March, or as soon as the water temperature
gets to around forty-eight to fifty degrees.
All the baits discussed in this article are available at www.delawaretackle.com

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