What you're looking at
The northern pike (Esox lucius) is the UK's apex freshwater predator — long, lean, and unmistakably built for the ambush. Found in stillwaters, rivers and lochs the length of the country.
Key features
- Body: Long, slender, slightly compressed. The dorsal and anal fins sit far back, almost level with the tail — the giveaway shape.
- Head: Long, duck-bill snout, big mouth, large round eyes set high on the head.
- Teeth: Hundreds of needle-sharp teeth lining the jaws and palate. Always carry forceps and unhooking mat.
- Markings: Olive-green to brassy back with light, bean-shaped spots running in horizontal rows across the flanks. Belly is creamy white.
- Size: "Jacks" up to 5 kg are common; specimen 10 kg+ fish exist in most decent waters; the UK record is over 21 kg.
Confusion species
- Zander (Sander lucioperca): Similar long body, but a spiny perch-family dorsal fin (not a single soft fin), bigger eye, fewer teeth, no horizontal spot pattern.
- Chub: Predatory enough to confuse very small jacks at a glance, but chub have a round body, large scales and a small mouth.
Where to find them
Pike hunt by ambush — they need cover. Look for weed beds, lily pads, drop-offs, marina edges, river slacks, and the seam between still and moving water. Most active in the cooler months, particularly through autumn into early spring. Avoid targeting pike during the warmest summer days; stressed fish from low-oxygen water struggle to recover.