If I had to name one skill that’s improved my pike catch rate more than any single piece of tackle, bait, or technique change over twenty years, it would be watercraft – specifically, learning to read where pike are actually likely to be holding rather than fishing wherever looks conventionally “pikey.”
Early on, I fished pike the way most beginners do: find open water near reed lines, cast out, and wait. It produces fish, but it’s a scattergun approach. What changed things was paying closer attention to genuinely subtle signs – a slight depth change barely visible from the bank, a spot where baitfish activity was consistently higher, a specific stretch of otherwise unremarkable bank that just kept producing more than nearby, apparently similar water.
Water temperature and time of year change where this “right” water actually is, too. Summer pike sit differently to winter pike, and a spot that produces reliably in November can be nearly dead in July. Learning to adjust my expectation of where fish should be, rather than returning to the same swims regardless of season, made a genuine difference.
None of this is secret information, and I’m sure plenty of experienced anglers would say the same thing. But it took me years of fishing before watercraft actually clicked as the dominant factor, rather than treating it as a secondary consideration behind bait and rig choice. If I could tell my younger self one thing, it would be to spend more time simply watching water before committing to a swim.
Rob Hadley grew up fishing the rivers and drains of the Norfolk Broads, and it was inevitable that pike would become his species of choice. He’s been targeting predators seriously for over 20 years – starting on dead baits, moving through live bait rigs, and eventually landing on lure fishing as his preferred method about eight years ago.
These days he fishes the Broads through winter, travels to Chew Valley Lake each spring for its outsized fish, and spends the warmer months working soft plastics on rivers across the East Midlands for perch and zander. He’s had pike to 31lb and perch to 3lb 9oz, and reckons both records are beatable on the right day with the right set-up.
At The River Bend, Rob writes the predator species guides, lure fishing technique articles, and most of the winter fishing content.
Covers: Pike, perch, zander, lure fishing, winter fishing, predator rigs