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Home >> Freshwater
Species >> Northern Pike
Northern Pike
Introduction
The large and popular northern pike (Esox lucius)
is most common from the Great Lakes north to central
Manitoba, though its range extends throughout much
of North America.
Northern's grow extremely fast - in the southern waters
they may grow to over thirty inches in length in only
three years. In northern waters their growth rate is
slower, but by the end of their first year most pike
are over fifteen inches in length.
Behaviour
Pike spawn in the northern areas of their range at
two years of age. A few of the faster-growing pike
in the southern range may spawn after one year. In
the spring, the pike move into the shallows at night
and wait to spawn until the following afternoon when
the waters have warmed to 50ºF.All members of the pike
family do all of their feeding during the day. Spring,
fall, and winter fishing seems to produce the most
pike, but they can be caught in the summer. The fish
seek cooler waters during the hot summer months, but
they do continue to feed in hot weather.
Pike do not swim in schools, but they do group together
in prime weedy areas. Where one fish is sighted, there
will likely be others in the same vicinity. Most pike
are found in five to twenty feet of water, at the edges
of dense weed beds, especially weed beds near sharp
drop offs.
Fishing Techniques
Pike attack almost anything that looks like a potential
meal - usually minnows and other small fish, but also
ducklings and muskrats.
Use medium or heavy bait casting equipment for these
big-lure fish. Almost any lure attracts the attention
of a voracious pike, but large spoons and plugs usually
catch the biggest specimens.
Where legal, bait an eight-inch live sucker hooked
lightly under the back fin with a 3/0 hook on a twelve-inch
wire leader. Hang the bait about five feet below a
large bobber and add enough weight to keep the bait
down. Lower the rig into the water, watch the bait
swim for the weeds, then suspend the bait near the
edge if the weed bed. When the pike strikes the bait,
the bobber will be pulled underwater and held there
while the pike turns the bait to swallow it headfirst.
Try to set the hook before the pike swallows the bait
- the hook placement at the back of the bait's fin
ensures the fish will be well hooked even before it
swallows the bait, and a swallowed bait harms smaller
pike. When using heavy bait, use heavy bait casting
equipment with twenty-pound test line.
Summer Techniques
Summer pike prefer cooler waters, and tend to cluster
in prime areas that are generally six to twelve feet
deep. Look for pike where a river enters the lake or
in shallow lakes that contain depressed bottoms from
old river channels. Rows of depressions contain cooler
lake water where large pike gather. Fish live bait
on or near the bottom under a bobber for these summer
Northern's
Summer pike fishing is also great with slowly worked
artificial lures. With a sand or mud lake bottom, slowly
drag a black or brown lead-head jig along a cool-water
depression. Other slowly worked lures are the Mirrolures
and Mepps Giant Killers.
Spring and Fall Techniques
Most anglers have the best pike fishing experience
in the spring and fall when the lake temperature cools.
Look for fish in six to twelve feet deep flats with
weeds and scattered brush. Cast a 3 or 4-inch red-and-white
spoon (or a red-and-yellow spoon in lakes with yellow
perch or walleye forage fish). On overcast days, use
bright silver or gold spoons.
For trolling and casting, use medium-weight bait casting
gear with a fifteen-pound-test line and a twelve-inch
wire leader. If the pike do not strike with the wire
leader attached, remove it and try the lure again.
When using a spoon lure, make sure the ball-bearing
swivels are quality swivels that do not inhibit the
spoon's action or twist the line.
When fishing a spoon over submerged weed beds, let
the lure drop just above the weeds (a 4-inch spoon
falls at a rate of about 1 ft./sec) then quickly retrieve
the spoon for a few seconds. Stop and let the lure
flutter down near the weeds and drop the rod tip one
or two feet towards the spoon. The spoon moves slightly
backwards at this point, a movement that often triggers
a strike from a following pike.
Over sandy or muddy bottoms, let the spoon sink to
the lake floor then hastily retrieve it for a few feet
then let it sink to the bottom. Most strikes occur
when the spoon is resting motionless on the bottom.
Sometimes the pike are interested only in falling
spoons. Use a jigging movement, pointing the rod at
the spoon and quickly lifting the rod straight up and
overhead. Immediately drop the rod again and reel in
the slack line slowly. When the line is tight, quickly
jerk the rod in an overhead position and repeat the
process. Since the pike take the spoon as it is falling,
the (firm) quick vertical lift on the rod will hook
the fish.
In weedy waters, try replacing the easily snagged
treble hook with a single large hook that is easier
to navigate through dense aquatic growth, and is easier
to remove from a toothy pike's mouth.
In the fall, the cold, windy days that signal changing
seasons are excellent pike fishing days. Large groups
of pike congregate on flats with bundles of weed growth
in water five to ten feet deep. To find pike, use a
systematic trolling pattern that covers the whole area.
Troll about 20 feet behind the boat until the fish
are found, then cast to the small area.
When the pike are scattered in the weedy flats, trolling
is the best method. A pike that is following a spoon
will often strike when the boat makes a turn, or if
the spoon makes a jerky motion. Make several passes
over the same areas where pike are sighted or where
they have struck the lure.
Spoons are not the only trolling lures that catch
big pike; plugs, large spinner baits, and sometimes
streamer flies entice eager pike. Large spinner baits
remain popular fall trolling lures. Try those with
a large, single silver Willow-Leaf blade and a black
buck tail body. Under windy conditions try using a
yellow body, and in discoloured water use a basic black
spinner bait.
Use the same techniques for catching northern pike
throughout their range from the U.S. rivers to the
Canadian lakes. Fish the flats and weed beds from fall
to spring and find the cooler bottom depressions in
the summer months for big pike fishing all year long.
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This site last updated on March 5, 2007
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