The water
Bridal Lake is a small stillwater, roughly 4.8 hectares, in the hills west of Creston, south of the Three Sisters Peaks, in the West Kootenay. It sits within the Lower Arrow Lake drainage group by its nearest mapped stream network, though no named outflow is documented for this lake.
Stocking
For an angler judging whether a lake like this still holds fish, the release record is the best evidence available. Bridal Lake was stocked with rainbow trout 24 times between 1928 and 1997, roughly 95,600 fish in total, drawing on hatchery strains that included Pennask, Premier, Duncan River, Tunkwa, Badger, Genier, Dragon, Gerrard Creek and Cottonwood over the decades. The program tapered from occasional large plants of fry and eyed eggs in the early and mid-20th century (20,000 Cottonwood-strain eyed eggs in 1928, 10,000 Duncan River-strain fish in 1984) to smaller annual yearling releases by the 1990s. The last recorded plant, on 1997-06-25, put 500 Pennask-strain yearlings into the lake, and nothing has been stocked since.
Bridal — 95,600 fish stocked, 1928–1997
Rainbow Trout. Source: Province of BC — FIDQ / FISS Fish Releases via the Freshwater Fisheries Society of BC.
| Year | Rainbow Trout |
|---|---|
| 1997 | 500 |
| 1996 | 500 |
| 1995 | 2,000 |
| 1994 | 2,000 |
| 1993 | 2,000 |
| 1992 | 2,000 |
| 1991 | 2,000 |
| 1990 | 2,000 |
| 1989 | 2,000 |
| 1988 | 2,000 |
| 1986 | 2,000 |
| 1984 | 12,000 |
| 1983 | 8,500 |
| 1982 | 12,000 |
| 1980 | 12,500 |
| 1979 | 2,500 |
| 1970 | 2,000 |
| 1965 | 2,100 |
| 1950 | 5,000 |
| 1928 | 20,000 |
That near-three-decade gap since the last release means Bridal Lake cannot be treated as an active put-grow fishery today. If rainbow trout persist, they are either a naturally sustaining population or a low-density holdover from the 1997 plant's descendants; confirm the current state locally before counting on this water.
The fishing
With no confirmed current population, on-the-water advice here has to stay general. If rainbow trout are present, a small West Kootenay stillwater like this typically fishes on the same pattern as the region's other put-grow lakes: a Chironomid fished under an indicator over the shoals in spring, moving to leech and attractor patterns along any drop-off as the water warms. Small-lake stillwater tactics generally apply. Confirm forage, structure and technique locally before relying on this as a plan for the day.
Before you fish
Access and the rules
No boat launch, trail or parking information is documented for Bridal Lake. Confirm access, any private-land crossings and current closures locally before planning a trip; the map panel shows where the lake sits in its drainage.
