Mike Folkestad's
Pro Tips
LIGHT
BREAKS
"Folkestad
fishes post-spawn females by finding deeper water near spawning
areas. But to zero in on the proper depth, Mike focuses on what
he calls light breaks"
Patterning
post-spawn largemouths isn’t all too difficult. Basically,
what happens during post-spawn is males stay to guard the fry,
while the females move off to the closest deep water near the
spawning areas. The males are pretty easy to catch because they’re
aggressive in defense, but females can be kind of tough for a
week or two while they recover from the stress of spawning.
One of the best baits for fishing fry-guarding males is a chugger-style
topwater. I like the Rio Rico, and I make sure that, during this
time of year, all my chuggers include a feathered hook. You want
to fish these baits slowly and keep them in the strike zone longer,
and the feather still moves even when the bait is at rest. If
bass are guarding fry, this feather seems to be key, and you will
definitely get more bites with it.
Spinnerbaits and jerkbaits can be productive for males during
mornings, but once the sun gets higher, these baits kind of shut
down. If the wind picks up they may continue to work, but the
Rico, on the other hand, seems to catch fish all day long. Also
try throwing a smaller Senko.
Bigger
Bites
If you don’t really care about catching numbers and want
to fish for the bigger females, you can head for the closest deep
water to the spawning sites and fish structure. It could be a
steep break, an inside turn in the breakline, a rockpile, even
some wood, but it shouldn’t be far from the spawning sites.
The key here is to make sure you’re fishing the right depth.
Whenever I start targeting post-spawn females, I head straight
for what I call the light break. To find it, when the sun is shining
on the water, look for the spot along the breakline where the
color changes from light to dark. The females tend to congregate
right there in that zone of darker water color.
Start by fishing spider jigs, generally with 1/4- to 3/8-ounce
heads, in shad and crawdad colors. A jig’n pig, I think,
is a little too much and doesn’t seem to work as well for
these fish. Work the spider jigs from the shallow ledges to down
deep, and target structure on structure: ledges, sharper breaks,
little humps—basically the first good contact areas out
from the spawning sites.
You also can dropshot this light-break area, or work a Texas-rig
worm. Other bait options include the Lucky Craft CV350—a
crank that’s not too big and runs around 8 feet—or
the lipless LV 500.
I don’t recommend trying to graph fish this time of year.
Your boat won’t be much deeper than about 10 feet, so your
cone will only paint a small picture of bottom. Use your graph
to find structure and cover, but don’t count on it to find
fish.
Another strong factor in figuring out the post-spawn pattern can
be weeds. In my area—the desert lakes of Southern California—we
don’t have a lot of weeds. But up north, bass will use the
weedbeds for spawning. They spawn in the holes, and when guarding
fry, the males will generally be close to the holes. The bass
will also spawn along the edge of the inside weedline—between
the weeds and shore.
As the females pull off, they’ll relocate to the outside
weedline, which functions just the same as a breakline in desert
lakes. Jigs won’t work as well here, so I usually crank
or jerk the edge, making parallel casts and working different
depths.
Also, don’t overlook the frog bite. Try pulling scumfrogs
over those weeds for both males and females. Focus on irregularities
in the weeds: holes, outside and inside turns, or changes in weed
type.
Separating
Yourself
A lot of people can go out and catch post-spawn fish—it’s
really not that hard. The hard part is catching the bigger-than-average
fish to separate yourself from the rest of the pack.
If I’m fishing a tournament, I’ll probably make sure,
right off the bat, that I get together a small bag of males—could
be three, four, maybe five, whatever I feel good with. If I know
I can catch three good females, though, I might only catch two
males first, then see how the day goes. But I won’t waste
the whole day trying to upgrade males; I’ll try to cull
males out with the females.
After I have that base, then I move out and start fishing outside
pieces of structure like underwater points, breaklines and rockpiles.
It has to be below the light break, as I mentioned, and I won’t
get as many bites, but each bite I do get will be from a better-than
average fish.
Sometimes, however, I might vary this gameplan and try for a bigger
bite first thing in the morning with a Rico or Spook. There may
be a few females in the shallows early in the morning, and getting
one quick is a great way to start.
The final signal that reveals bass are moving into their summer
patterns occurs when you start seeing shad running the banks and
spawning. Down south, this will probably happen by early May;
in more northern areas, it might be late May or early June.