Campsite Creek is an official Kootenay Land District water (key JASQL) that feeds Lodgepole Creek in the Wigwam River drainage, part of the wider Elk River system in the East Kootenay. The Region 4 regulations synopsis has no entry naming Campsite by itself, and no fishing guide publishes coverage of it. Other B.C. creeks share the Campsite Creek name; this page follows the Kootenay Land District water at the coordinate above, the one that sits in the Wigwam-Lodgepole cluster.
The water
The creek sits at 49.288889, -114.840278 on the provincial gazetteer, one of a cluster of small Lodgepole child creeks that also includes Sportsman Creek, Rockcleft Creek, Pylon Creek and Abode Creek. Local fish-observation data carries a Campsite named line but zero direct records on it, so no stream order, length or discharge figure is available for this reach specifically. Neighbouring Rockcleft Creek does carry a direct signal (11 westslope cutthroat, 5 rainbow trout, 3 generic cutthroat), which shows the branch can hold fish, but that is a different creek's record, not evidence for Campsite itself. The broader Lodgepole branch holds Westslope Cutthroat Trout, Bull Trout, rainbow trout, generic cutthroat and Dolly Varden, but that is branch-wide context, not a Campsite-specific record. The Lodgepole/Wigwam branch also carries bull trout spawning and Class II conservation weight, so until a stronger source says otherwise, treat a small, unrecorded tributary like this one as possible refuge or nursery habitat rather than open water.
The fishing
There is nothing here to recommend as a destination yet. With zero direct fish observations, no regulation entry naming Campsite specifically and no guide who publishes a trip on it, the honest read is a regulation-and-access check rather than a fishery. Elk River Guiding Company and other Wigwam-branch operators describe the parent Wigwam as a remote, clear, walk-and-wade stream with migratory bull trout, deep pools, boulders and log jams, and that character likely extends into the Lodgepole tributaries by geography, but none of it has been confirmed on Campsite itself.
If a future survey confirms legal, fish-bearing water, the nearest verified hatch spine is the Fernie and Elk River calendar: golden Stoneflies near the June 15 opener, Green Drakes, PMDs and Light Cahills, Yellow Sallies, Caddisflies (Sedges), August Terrestrials (Hoppers, Ants, Beetles), fall Blue-Winged Olives and October caddis, plus Sculpin and fry where the water holds char. A matching small-stream kit would lean on a Stimulator or Royal Wulff up top, an Elk Hair Caddis through summer, and a Hare's Ear, Pheasant Tail or Prince Nymph underneath, with an Adams for the fall olives. None of this has been confirmed on Campsite itself; it is the surrounding branch's pattern, not a creek-specific report.
Treat this as unconfirmed water
Conditions
- Navigability: no channel-geometry survey (width, gradient or discharge) is on record for this creek, consistent with a small, unsurveyed headwater tributary.
- Stocking: no stocking record. Any fish present would be wild.
Access and the rules
No named road, trailhead, parking area or put-in has been confirmed for Campsite Creek. The nearest reliable landmark in the area is the km 26 falls marker on Lodgepole Road, cited in the regulation table as the boundary between the upstream and downstream Lodgepole Creek listings; it is a legal reference point, not a confirmed access route to Campsite itself. Road condition, tenure and any closure notices still need field confirmation.
