Gamefish

Northern Pike

Esox lucius

The water wolf. Where they exist in New England, pike grow big, hit hard, and bring a genuine apex-predator element to freshwater, complete with a mouthful of teeth that demands a wire leader.

Northern pike are the true big-game freshwater predator of the Northeast, where you can find them. Unlike the pickerel in every pond, pike in New England are a more localized fishery, but the waters that hold them, notably parts of the Connecticut River system and select lakes, can produce genuinely large, powerful fish. A big pike inhaling a bait boatside is a sight that sticks with you.

How to identify them

Pike are bigger, thicker versions of the pickerel outline, but the markings are reversed: pike show rows of light, bean-shaped spots on a darker green body, where pickerel wear a dark chain on gold. Pike also grow far larger and have a broader, heavier head. Both carry a duck-bill snout full of teeth.

Where they live

Pike are a more localized New England fish than pickerel or bass, established in specific waters, parts of the Connecticut River drainage and certain lakes and impoundments. Within those waters they hold in and along weed beds, drop-offs, coves and river backwaters, ambushing prey much like their smaller cousins. Check local waters, as pike are not everywhere.

Tip Big pike eat big meals. Do not be shy about throwing an oversized bait, a large fish will happily eat a lure that looks too big, and the size helps weed out the smaller fish.

How to catch them, and the wire question

Pike eat like the apex predators they are. Effective offerings include large spinnerbaits, big spoons, jerkbaits, swimbaits and glide baits, and, for fly anglers, large streamers on an 8- to 9-weight. One rule is non-negotiable: use a wire or heavy fluorocarbon leader. Pike teeth cut ordinary line instantly, and a bite-off often means a lure left in a fish.

Regulations Northern pike are managed with size and creel limits, and rules can be water-specific. Confirm current regulations for the water you are fishing with MassWildlife before keeping fish.

Handling

Big pike need careful handling. Use a large rubber net, long pliers and a jaw gripper, keep the fish horizontal and supported, keep your fingers well clear of the teeth and gills, and revive it fully, especially in warm water, before release.

From the page to the water

Learn it here, land it out there

Reading is a great start. The fastest way to get good is a day on the water with someone who does it every day.

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Note: fishing regulations (size limits, bag limits, seasons, permits) change often. Always confirm current rules with the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries (saltwater), MassWildlife (freshwater), or NOAA Fisheries (offshore/HMS) before you keep a fish.