Telford Creek is a small, direct-record tributary of Cummings Creek in the Elk River valley near Sparwood, carrying wild Rainbow Trout and Westslope Cutthroat Trout in numbers that stand out among the unsurveyed child creeks in the Cummings cluster. No trailhead, put-in or guide coverage has turned up for it, so it reads today as a habitat-and-regulation water worth confirming on the ground before planning a trip.
The water
NRCan's Geographical Names database lists Telford Creek as an official Kootenay Land District water (key JBHAY) at 49.786389, -114.974167. It drains into Cummings Creek, which in turn joins the Elk River on the west side of the valley. Local fish-record extraction found 10 direct observations on Telford itself: 5 Rainbow Trout and 5 Westslope Cutthroat Trout, the strongest child-creek signal in the Cummings cluster, where Ross, Rhodes, Will Weaver and Whiting creeks carry named channels but no direct observations on record. The 2018 Elk Valley aquatic cumulative-effects report treats Telford Creek as its own assessment watershed, flagging stream crossings, road density, riparian disturbance and temperature as the key aquatic-risk indicators in this part of the valley.
The fishing
Expect small-tributary work here: pocket water, woody cover, short and careful casts rather than long runs or open holding water. The direct rainbow trout and cutthroat records are a genuine habitat signal, not proof of easy access or good catch rates, and no guide has published a Telford-specific report. Elk River Guiding Company and Kootenay Fly Shop & Guiding Co. cover the wider Elk Valley tributary network for general technique and timing, useful context but not a substitute for scouting this creek directly. Rainbow trout and cutthroat sharing the same small water also means hybrids are possible, so confirm species identification and handle every fish with care before any harvest decision.
No direct hatch samples have turned up for Telford Creek, so fish it on the same spine that works the rest of the Fernie-area Elk system: golden Stoneflies emerging around the mid-June opener, Pale Morning Duns and Light Cahills peaking through July and August, Yellow Sallies and Caddisflies (Sedges) running mid-June into October, and August Terrestrials (Hoppers, Ants, Beetles) as the water drops and clears. A small mountain-tributary box built around Stimulator, Royal Wulff and Adams dries, an Elk Hair Caddis and small Chubby Chernobyl, with Pat's Rubber Legs, Prince, Hare's Ear, Pheasant Tail and Copper John nymphs, covers the water, and small-stream dry-fly tactics suit the cutthroat well.
Handle with care
Conditions
- Navigability: no channel-geometry data is on file for Telford Creek. The direct fish records and small-tributary character point to wade-only, technical pocket water rather than anything driftable.
- Stocking: no stocking record. Telford Creek runs entirely on wild fish.
- Watershed context: the 2018 Elk Valley aquatic cumulative-effects report lists Telford Creek as its own assessment watershed alongside Cummings Creek - Lower and Cummings Creek - Upper, with stream crossings, road density, riparian disturbance and temperature flagged as the key aquatic-risk indicators.
Access and the rules
No named trailhead, put-in or parking area has been confirmed for Telford Creek, and no guide lists a dedicated trip here. Treat it as a scouting water in the same Cummings Creek cluster near Sparwood: check current Forest Service Road condition and land status before heading in.
