Canada Fly Guide
Rivers & Lakes · Columbia Valley Tributary

Ben Abel Creek

A small Dutch Creek tributary in the Columbia Valley carrying a genuine wild trout signal, westslope cutthroat and rainbow trout, but no confirmed public access or guide coverage. Best treated as scout water for now.
Updated July 8, 2026

Ben Abel Creek is a small tributary of Dutch Creek in the Columbia Valley, feeding the upper Columbia River system near the Fairmont-Invermere-Radium corridor. Local fish-inventory records show a genuine trout signal here, eight westslope cutthroat trout and four rainbow trout, enough to mark it as a legitimate small-stream scout water rather than empty habitat.

The water

The creek's recorded mouth sits at 50.30493, -116.18165, within the Dutch Creek family of Columbia Valley tributaries. Local beat data attaches 12 fish records to Ben Abel Creek: eight westslope cutthroat and four rainbow trout, a real signal for a small tributary, though well short of the volume recorded on the Dutch Creek mainstem itself (77 records) or nearby Whitetail Creek (263). No channel-geometry survey, width, gradient or discharge, has been matched to Ben Abel Creek specifically, so treat it as a typical narrow valley tributary until a field visit narrows that down.

The fishing

With eight cutthroat and four rainbow trout on record, Ben Abel Creek reads as classic small-stream water: short drifts, tight pools, and fish that respond to a well-placed dry fly more than a technical presentation. Kootenay Troutfitters guides the wider Columbia Valley around Radium, Invermere and Fairmont, but no source confirms a dedicated Ben Abel Creek program, so plan on this as an independent scouting trip rather than a booked day.

water_drop
Dutch Creek tributary
Feeds the Columbia River
set_meal
12 fish records
8 cutthroat, 4 rainbow trout
footprint
Small stream
Access and summer flow unconfirmed
forest
Columbia Valley
Fairmont-Invermere-Radium corridor

Small-stream attractors and naturals cover most of the water: a Royal Wulff, Adams, Elk Hair Caddis or Stimulator on top, beetle and ant terrestrial patterns through summer, and a Hare's Ear, Prince Nymph or Pheasant Tail to probe the deeper pockets. Expect caddis, mayflies, small stoneflies and summer terrestrials to make up most of the diet before a streamer is worth tying on.

phishing

Handle wild cutthroat with care

These are wild, small-stream fish. Fish single barbless hooks, keep each cutthroat wet and out of the water only briefly, and avoid working the same small pools repeatedly during warm or low-water stretches, when a short creek like this can heat up fast.

Conditions

  • Stream character: no bcfishpass channel-geometry survey (width, gradient, discharge) is on record for Ben Abel Creek, unlike its parent Dutch Creek. Expect narrow, small-stream water typical of the Dutch Creek family until a field check confirms otherwise.
  • Stocking: no stocking record. It runs entirely on wild fish.

Access and the rules

No public access point, trailhead or parking area has been confirmed for Ben Abel Creek. Treat it as a scouting destination, and check current road and land status in the field before planning a day around it.

gavel

Before you fish

No Ben Abel Creek-specific exception is listed in the Region 4 regulations. Regional stream defaults apply: closed Apr 1 to Jun 14, single barbless hook, and trout/char catch-and-release outside the general season. Confirm the current Region 4 synopsis before you fish.