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Northern Pike Strategies

If you are a northern pike fanatic, the author has a few weapons you should consider adding to your arsenal.

PikeYou arrive at your favorite pike-infested waters and fumble excitedly through your tackle, so keyed up to catch northerns that every minute spent assembling and rigging rods seems like a fruitless hour. Time's a wasting and the pike are waiting.

Finally, it's time and prime time at that. It's spring -- the season when shallow bays will concentrate the largest pike on the river or lake!

You cast everything you have, but after a few hours of nonstop tossing of spoons or spinners, you have only a few small pike to show for your efforts. Something's wrong! Catching pike is supposed to be a given, or at least, easier than this. What's up?

Could be a cold front moved in the night before causing the northerns to have a serious case of lockjaw. Perhaps previous fishing pressure has these fish a bit more educated to your tactics than you expected. Maybe the big-fish population is overrated and catching that trophy pike is going to be more difficult than you thought.

During the warm summer season, small pike -- those under 30 inches -- prefer water in the 67- to 72-degree range, while bigger northerns favor cooler temperatures of 50 to 55 degrees. In the spring, however, large females begin searching out warming back bays immediately after ice-out to begin the process of spawning. Even after depositing their eggs, these large pike will often linger in these waters to regain their strength after the rigors associated with nature's call to reproduce. These areas become prime feeding grounds.

The extent to which pike move will often be dictated by the presence of cover such as aquatic vegetation. Not surprisingly, pike activity will also be influenced by the habitat used by prey species. Baitfish that are important to pike -- such as suckers, fathead minnows and perch -- are also seeking the same shallows to spawn during the spring. Sheer numbers of these prey species, vying for the same spawning habitat, allow northern pike to fatten up on them while leaving enough brood stock for future generations.

Besides shallow-water weedbeds, if the bay you've been working also offers points, channel edges or other defined objects of structure that pike can relate to, your problem of not catching fish isn't your location. You've already found "pike heaven." The lack of success may be associated with other factors.

Your choice of baits, lures and presentations will all affect success rates, even in the best of locations. For starters, if northern pike aren't showing an interest in standard spoons or spinners, chances are the problem is a "presentation thing." Speed may not be the key element to triggering strikes on this particular day. In such cases, changes will be required, not only in presentation, but in the offering itself.




On the average, dead bait probably accounts for more large pike in North America than any other bait or lure. Dead bait presentations are especially productive in the spring when large females are looking to ingest as much food as possible without expending a lot of energy. Instead of having to chase a fast-moving lure, your offering appears to be an easy meal to the pike and is often hard to pass up. Forage that dies in the area rests on the bottom and can provide a food source when pike aren't aggressively seeking live targets.

Pike are commonly thought of as being accomplished predators -- bullies of the water -- taking on anything that moves. But pike commonly eat dead minnows, suckers, smelt, alewives or other small game fish. Trophy-size northerns often scavenge dead fish off the bottom, acting more like a prominent scavenger than an accomplished predator. I've discovered this trait to continue well into summer in water that remains cold enough to prevent the dead fish from decomposing.

Now, it's important that I don't create any misconceptions about northerns. They may eagerly accept an easy meal of dead bait, but they can also display a fierce disposition to anything that invades their territory.

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On several occasions, I've had a northern pike strike my lure only to discover that the fish I was battling was the same pike my boat partner was already fighting. The pike's voracious appetite or just plain mean disposition caused it to strike a lure despite the fact that it was already engaged in battle.

A number of lures have been designed to trigger the pike's naturally bad attitude. Many of these lures have been around for years, while other newcomers are quickly gaining the respect of the pike-fishing community for their success. And then there are those lures that are simply nothing more than remakes of the old standbys used by our grandfathers that are being reintroduced to a new generation of anglers.

Wobbling spoons like Dardevles, Blue Fox Aqua Spoons and Len Thompsons are the bread-and-butter lures of spring pike fishing. These 3- to 4-inch-long wide-bodied spoons exhibit a slow lazy-like wobble that will often interest pike that are in a moderate to aggressive mood. Typically, the larger 5- to 6- inch lures are best left to the salmon crowd.

When using spoons in the spring, cast them into the shallows, retrieving them slowly with an occasional pause-pop-flutter action to trigger any following pike. Then, hang on tight!

Red-and-white spoons with a silver metallic back or a yellow five-of- diamonds pattern have, without a doubt, been the top pike-catching spoons during the spring than all other combinations combined. If these spoons have a flaw, it would be their ability to catch weeds as quickly as pike. Typically, each comes standard with a large treble hook dangling from it and, when targeting northern pike that are holding in shallow weeds, these hooks can foul quickly.

Straight-shaft-spinners -- such as the Panther Martin, Blue Fox or Mepps -- are also good lures for trophy northerns. The spinning action of these lures causes a slight lifting action, which permits a slower retrieve and often an enticing action. That's not to say they can't be worked rapidly. The versatility of in-line spinners allows anglers to try different presentations while searching for the right speed for triggering strikes.

Like spoons, a typical spinner is also rigged with treble hooks that can hang in thick weeds; however, the lure presents an even more serious problem. The flat, straight-running retrieve characterized by spinners often permits northern pike to ingest the lure deep into its throat, causing potential harm to fish that are to be released. As the northern trails the spinner, it is able to home in on it such that when the strike does occur, the spinner is embedded well within the tooth-laden mouth. Rarely does a pike caught on a spinner pull free.

Here is where a good pair of needle-nose pliers comes in handy. Not only does the angler need to fear the hundreds of teeth lining the interior of the pike's mouth, but also the sharp hooks on the spinner. As any veteran of northern pike waters can attest, the thrashing of a pike can cause a lure's hooks to bury themselves into an unsuspecting hand. Continued thrashing can have serious consequences.

In weedy conditions, large spinnerbaits normally used by bass anglers can be an effective tool. The single hook is a welcome feature when you plan to release the majority of your fish; however, the number of hookups may be reduced. When pike activity is high on spinnerbaits, a good tip is to add a trailer hook. Many of the strikes that would have normally been missed will now put that trophy in the boat. Spinnerbaits can be good lures to use but normally don't match the attraction of spoons or in-line spinners.

If I had to pick a favorite method of catching fish, it would certainly be with the use of topwater baits. There's just something exhilarating about watching as the surface of the water explodes when a pike attacks my offering. Buzzbaits and other similar topwater lures only rate an occasional use for northerns. However, when pike are willing to feed off the surface, there is a great time to be had.

During a spring trip to a remote Canadian lake several years ago, my fishing partners and I spent an entire day casting spoons without much success. Then as the day wore on and the number of untried lures in my tackle box dwindled, I decided to try tossing a buzzbait over the top of some weeds and heavy log structure. Seconds after my first cast hit the water, the surface exploded as the largest northern of the day inhaled my lure.

That particular lure was shaped like a dozen others I had in my box with one important exception. This one had a large buzzbait-type spinner on the front that trashed the water like a fleeing duckling. I had purchased a few of them before we flew into the lake and suddenly they became real expensive. Trading them for cooking and dish-washing duties made the trip seem a lot more enjoyable. I can only hope that one of my fishing partners doesn't have the only good lure on our next trip. I'm likely to return home with dishpan hands.

As good as buzzbait lures can be, they're normally not the best choice for topwater success. Slow-swimming floating minnow baits -- like large Rapalas or Thundersticks -- are a better choice during the spring since aggressive pike in shallow water are more likely to take a slow-moving or motionless bait off the surface.

Cast the lure over or near a weedbed and allow it to sit motionless for a moment. Begin taunting nearby northerns by twitching the lure so it imitates a crippled minnow. After a movement or two, begin a series of short jerks allowing the lure to nose-dive a few inches below the surface and then float back up. If this hasn't enticed a strike, begin twitching the lure a bit faster as if it were a minnow regaining a sense of normalcy and beginning to swim off. Any pike worthy of its reputation should immediately attack the apparent easy meal. If not, repeat the process with a cast in another direction.

While the preceding tactics and tools illustrate the vast majority of presentations used for taking shallow-water pike in the spring, there are a few alternatives that can be productive for those times when northerns are reluctant to take repeatedly seen presentations.

Finesse tactics are rarely thought of in terms of pike fishing. Hefty spinning or casting tackle can be used for tempting reluctant pike; however, their main drawback is the sufficient weight they carry for casting. This weight offers anglers the ability to reach out for fish that haven't been spooked by the boat, but negates any chance for a silent entry into the water. With a little creativity, there are several choices that anglers can use.

Slug-Go-style minnow bodies offer alternatives for fishing within the top 3 feet of the water column. These lures are sufficiently weedless when worked in and around even the thickest weedbeds and can be extremely effective for taking northern pike. Near-weightless when rigged with a single hook, an 8-inch Slug-Go can be cast to the spookiest of fish. The entry into the water is nearly silent, while it seems to slither from side to side, drawing the attention of hungry predators below. A twitch of the rod tip sends it into a glide that can be in any direction -- up, down, sideways -- you never know. Neither do the pike!

For peak results while working cold water in the spring, it's best to keep the lure's action subtle with several long pauses between twitches. Give the pike plenty of time to approach, examine the bait and decide when to attack. Pausing may also give you time to see the fish and react to what it's doing.

Regardless of what type of lure you're using, all casts should enter the water beyond the pike's position. Finesse tactics are no exception. Cast past the fish and wait long enough for the ripples to settle. Point the rod tip toward the water and simply begin a short twitching action, reeling up all the slack while anticipating a strike. When the upper portion of the water column is to be covered, the weight of the hook and leader should be sufficient to make the bait drift downwards fast enough. To increase the downward fall, simply add a split shot or two ahead of the lure, being careful not to pinch and weaken the line.

Black-and-silver or blue-and-silver are probably the most popular colors, though most anything can produce. When using a Slug-Go or similar lure, be sure that the hook has a sufficiently large enough gap to accommodate the thick plastic body.

If asked to list the best and most popular methods of taking northern pike, most anglers probably wouldn't even include fly-fishing. I know, because before trying it, I wouldn't have. But taking a trophy-class northern pike -- or any pike at all -- on a fly rod can be one of the greatest experiences an angler can have. These fish know how to fight, and when tested on an 8- or 9-foot 8-weight fly rod, they can put all your angling skills to the test.

Using a fly rod for pike isn't for the novice angler. Tackling one of our best fighting game fish by anyone except a veteran can leave tackle twisted, tangled and broken.

Fly-fishing excels in those conditions when you cast traditional lures at pike and they remain uninterested. They ignore your efforts until you harass them to a point where they're finally chased off. Flies settle on the water with barely a ripple and rarely spook pike holding in even the shallowest water. If the water is calm enough to spot the fish and allow you to cast properly, you can lay a near-weightless fly within a few feet of the pike and work it to within inches of their face. A pause of the offering causes the fly to hang there, neither rising or falling, much like a live minnow.

When the water is a bit deeper, say 4 or 5 feet, and the fish are a bit spooked or unresponsive to shallow flies, it may be necessary to sink to their level. Switch to weighted streamers to reach a little deeper. Use the same technique of twitch-and-pause here as well. The results can be impressive.

Brad Befus | 8-pound tippet

Only three days later, on August 8, 1996, lightning struck the second time with Befus landing a 27-pound pike on the same river, but this time on light tippet. After another short battle, Befus once again released the fish back into the Innoko and walked away with the men's 8-pound tippet class record.

Brad Befus | 20-pound tippet World Record

Holding a world record on a popular game fish such as northern pike is what many anglers dream of all their lives. Bradley Befus had that dream come true twice during a fishing trip to Alaska in August 1996 when he set two separate tippet class records on northern pike. On August 5, 1996 Befus was fly fishing on the Innoko River when a 30-pound, 8-ounce pike crushed the fly he was casting.

/p> Five minutes after hooking up, Befus had the quality pike on the shore, where he quickly documented and released the fish alive — earning him the men's 20-pound tippet class world record.

Stephan Gockel | All-Tackle Length Record

German angler Stephan Gockel landed the largest All-Tackle Length record northern ever approved by the IGFA on October 1, 2013 while fishing around the area of Nimwegan in the Netherlands. Gockel was casting a Rooster V-Tail lure when he hooked into the 120 cm pike that he battled for 10 minutes before landing the fish. Once in the boat and under control, Gockel quickly measured, documented, and released the fish alive.

Thomas Lindwall |16-pound Line Class Record

It took Thomas Lindwall only 5 minutes to land the massive 39-pound, 12-ounce northern pike he pulled from a body just outside of Tenhultasjon, Sweden on a chilly November 1, 1990. Lindwall was trolling a Swim Whizz lure from his small boat when the record pike piled on. After a short fight on 16-pound tackle, Lindwall had the fish in the boat and was on the way back to the dock to get an official weight reading on the fish that has held the men's 16-pound line class record for 25 years.

Christer Mattsson | 6-pound Line Class Record

While pike fishing is very popular in Europe, what many non-European pike anglers don't realize is that some of the best fishing occurs in saltwater. In fact, Swedish angler Christer Mattsson landed his 35-pound, 12-ounce pike in the Baltic Sea, when he pulled it from Karlshamn, Sweden on September 19, 1998. Mattsson was casting a shallow diving Opm lure from his 12-foot aluminum boat when the pike hit. After surviving the initial run with his 6-pound tackle and no leader, Mattsson settled in for a long battle as the pike towed him around for nearly an hour, before he could pull the fish on board. This is the only pike ever recorded by the IGFA on 6-pound tackle.

Ake Nilsson | 12-pound Line Class Record

The title of the second heaviest northern pike ever recorded — a 47 pound, 4 ounce beast — belongs to Swedish angler Ake Nilsson. The historic catch was made on January 29, 1989 while Nilsson was casting an Italia lure from a 12-foot rowboat he was captaining down Sweden's Lodde River. After coming tight to the pike, Nilsson skillfully played the fish for 15-20 minutes on 12-pound test and only a couple inches of wire leader. Over the years, doubts have been raised about the true weight of the fish, as the photos don't appear to show a fish of nearly 50 pounds. However, the fish's massive length of 51.5 inches and a girth of 31 inches, leave little doubt to its incredible size.

Lothar Louis | All-Tackle Record

Despite the millions of diehard pike fishermen around the world, Lothar Louis remains the envy of them all due to the 25 kg (55 pound, 1 ounce) northern pike he pulled from Lake Grefeern, Germany nearly 30 years ago. When Louis arrived at his local fishing hole on the morning of October 16, 1986, his plan was to target carp and roach — not northern pike. However, Louis, like many of us anglers, was an optimist. It was Louis' habit at the start of each fishing day to make 15 casts with his 'pike rod ' — a spinning outfit spooled with 8 kg (16 pound) mono. On just his third cast of the morning, Louis' optimism was rewarded. The monster pike inhaled his spoon and Louis was hooked up to the fish of a lifetime. Unable to net the fish due to its tremendous size, and worried that he would lose the fish, Lothar had no choice but to plunge his hands inside the gill covers to land the fish. In an interview after the catch, Lothar is quoted as saying that he 'was so excited he did not feel the pain as the huge teeth sank into both hands as he lifted her up on the bank. ' Certainly a desperate move, given the serious dentition of the northern pike, but with a fish like that on the line, can you blame him?

Paolo Pacchiarini | 16-pound Fly Rod Record

On June 19, 2010, Italian angler Paolo Pacchiarini rented a boat for some fly fishing with his father on Lake Annone — just outside of Lecco, Italy — when a monstrous pike crushed the baitfish pattern fly he was casting. The 8 inches of wire shock tippet immediately following his fly indicates that Pacchiarini knew there were toothy pike in the area, but he couldn't believe the size of what he brought to the boat after the 10 minute fight. Weighing in at a whopping 36 pounds, the catch not only earned Pacchiarini the new men's 16-pound tippet class record, but it also earned him the bragging rights of having caught the largest northern ever recorded by the IGFA on fly tackle.

Benny Pettersson | 20-pound Line Class Record

Swedish angler Benny Pettersson barely missed the elusive 40-pound mark with his trophy, but the 39-pound, 14-ounce northern pike he pulled from Osthammer, Sweden on November 20, 1993 was plenty big enough to earn him a world record. Pettersson was casting a black and silver Zalt plug from a small boat when the record pike hit. After a tense 10 minute battle, Pettersson boated the fish and quickly made his way to shore to officially document his catch and new men's 20-pound line class world record.

Giacomo Pinotti | 8-pound Line Class Record

The frigid temperatures and snowfall were not enough to deter Swiss angler Giacomo Pinotti from making angling history on the morning of December 10, 1990, when he left his home in Ascona to fish the nearby Lake Maggiore. From reviewing Pinotti's record application, it appears he knew big pike were a possibility, as he reported using a large, live whitefish for bait. Pinotti's approach of 'big bait = big fish ' paid off that morning, as Pinotti ended up landing a huge 43-pound, 3-ounce pike, after an incredible hour and a half long fight on 8-pound test! Making the catch even more impressive is that Pinotti was not using any leader, and he reported catching his record fish from the shore!

Rick Townsend | 2-pound Line Class Record

While Rick Townsend's 23-pound, 15-ounce northern pike is not one of the largest specimens ever recorded with the IGFA — it is certainly one of the most impressive catches. On August 10, 1990, Rick Townsend was actually guiding two clients in the Alaskan wilderness from his floatplane. After touching down in a shallow lake near Anvik, Townsend and his two clients began fishing from the floats on his floatplane. Equipped with ultra-light tackle and casting a Mepp's spoon, Townsend hooked into what he immediately knew was a quality fish. After playing the fish for 15-20 minutes from the plane, Townsend jumped off the plane into the waist-deep water to distance himself from the hazards of the plane, and eventually landed the fish with his bare hands — earning him the men's 2-pound line class record.

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