The Field Journal
Rivers & Lakes · Stocked Stillwater

Big Fish Lake

A stocked stillwater on the west side of the Columbia River, southwest of Brisco in the upper Columbia Valley. Nearly ninety years of hatchery records show two very different programs: decades of cutthroat trout that ended in 1990, and an annual rainbow trout put-and-take plant that has run every spring since 2017.

The water

Big Fish Lake is a stocked stillwater on the west side of the Columbia River, southwest of Brisco in the upper Columbia Valley. No area or depth survey is on record for the lake, so treat its size and structure as unconfirmed until a local report or field visit fills that in.

Stocking

For an angler judging what's actually swimming in Big Fish Lake today, the release record tells two different stories. Provincial hatchery records run from 1938 to 2026 and log 52 releases, totalling roughly 626,000 fish. The earlier and much larger share of that is cutthroat trout: eyed eggs and fry logged simply as "Cutthroat Trout" in 1938-1940, then as westslope cutthroat trout from 1941 through 1990 (Kiakho, Palmer Bar Creek, Connor and Blue strains), 37 releases totalling about 598,000 fish. That program stopped in 1990 and has not resumed, so any cutthroat caught in the lake today are legacy or naturally recruiting fish, not a recent plant.

Stocking record

Big Fish Lake — 626,291 fish stocked, 1938–2026

Rainbow Trout, Cutthroat Trout. Source: Province of BC — FIDQ / FISS Fish Releases via the Freshwater Fisheries Society of BC.

YearRainbow TroutCutthroat Trout
20261,000·
20251,500·
20241,000·
20231,000·
20221,000·
20211,000·
20201,000·
20191,000·
20181,003·
2017700·
20144,000·
20136,000·
20124,484·
20102,000·
20092,000·
1990·5,000
1989·5,000
1988·5,000
1977·10,000
1976·15,000
1974·20,000
1973·18,000
1972·10,000
1971·25,000
1970·5,000
1969·5,000
1968·25,000
1967·10,700
1964·21,125
1963·21,000
1962·21,250
1959·23,000
1958·50,000
1957·30,187
1955·30,000
1954·25,000
1953·13,333
1952·13,193
1951·16,533
1950·16,666
1949·7,396
1948·5,520
1947·17,326
1946·15,936
1945·14,562
1944·9,478
1943·14,500
1942·13,333
1941·14,666
1940·13,300
1939·16,600
1938·15,000

Rainbow trout are the active program now: 15 releases since 2009, starting as occasional fall-catchable plants (2009-2014) before settling into an annual spring release every year since 2017. The most recent release, in May 2026, put 1,000 Fraser Valley-strain spring catchable rainbow (averaging about 238 g) into the lake, matching similar spring plants back through 2017. In practice, Big Fish Lake now fishes as a straightforward stocked-rainbow put-and-take water, its name and history notwithstanding.

The fishing

As a put-and-take fishery built on freshly stocked spring-catchable rainbow, expect fish holding in the shallower margins and cruising the shoreline rather than sitting on a deep thermocline. A standard small-lake stillwater approach is the sensible starting point: a chironomid under an indicator worked over any shoal, and a leech or attractor pattern along whatever drop-off structure the lake holds, until a local report narrows the tactics further.

waves
Stocked stillwater
Columbia River watershed, near Brisco
history
88-year stocking record
1938-2026, 52 releases
set_meal
Rainbow trout; cutthroat (legacy)
Rainbow trout since 2009; cutthroat ended 1990
egg
Rainbow, annual
1,000 spring catchable, Fraser Valley strain, May 2026

Access and the rules

No confirmed boat launch, parking area or public access point has been found for Big Fish Lake. Treat it as an access-check water: confirm a put-in and any private-land or seasonal restrictions locally before committing a day to it.

gavel

Before you fish

No water-specific exception is listed for Big Fish Lake in the Region 4 synopsis, so the regional default stillwater quota applies: trout/char 5 daily (max 1 rainbow or cutthroat over 50 cm, max 1 bull trout of any size). A freshwater licence is required for anglers 16 and over. Confirm current rules in the official synopsis before you fish.

Conditions

  • Stocking: the modern fishery runs on an annual rainbow trout plant (spring catchable, Fraser Valley strain), not the decades-long cutthroat program that closed in 1990. Match your expectations to the rainbow, not the lake's cutthroat history.
  • Survey: no depth, area or water-health survey is on record for Big Fish Lake.