I found an article online from On the water magazine dated April 30, 2025. Here is the excerpt:

Targeting pike in the Connecticut River has become noticeably more difficult in recent years. In addition to overfishing, several years ago, Connecticut’s Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (CT DEEP) suspended their pike spawning program based at Haddam Meadows. This helped supplement the “self-sustaining” river pike population, and a portion of those fingerlings were distributed to other pike lakes around the state as well. (Fingerlings are now purchased from New Jersey.) Mostly mild winters haven’t resulted in a snowpack-fueled spring freshet, which usually coincides with the pike spawn, and has limited their spawning success in shallow, weedy bays. Connecticut River pike grow fast and die young (around a 10-year lifespan). Roughly five years have gone by without the DEEP’s intervention, which I think the strength of the fishery relies on. Most of my focus has now gone west to several lakes and the Housatonic River, which currently have more robust pike populations.

https://onthewater.com/fishing-reports/2025/05/connecticut-fishing-report-may-8-2025

Sadly, Bald Pelican

Baldpelican