The Field Journal
Rivers & Lakes · Forster Creek Tributary

Frances Creek

Frances Creek joins Forster Creek in Purcell Range country west of Radium Hot Springs, and carries the strongest fish-record signal of any water in the Forster system: 24 provincial records of rainbow trout, brook trout and westslope cutthroat. The better fishing story is lake and wetland-connected rearing water, not one long continuous wade.

Frances Creek joins Forster Creek in Purcell Range country west of Radium Hot Springs, and carries the strongest fish-record signal of any water in the Forster system. Provincial fish-inventory data logs 24 records here: 11 rainbow trout, 6 brook trout and 7 westslope cutthroat trout. The better fishing story is lake and wetland-connected rearing water rather than long continuous wade reaches on the mainstem.

The water

Frances sits at 50.71164, -116.41294, running stream order 6 (near the top of a 1-to-6+ scale where 1 is a headwater trickle and 6+ is a full river) for roughly 53 km before joining Forster Creek, which drains into the Columbia River. Akenside Creek drains into Frances from the west, and Frances gathers Castor Creek, Hurst Creek and Ogelston Creek from its own side drainages. A regional fish habitat inventory calls out lake and wetland complexes, side channels and lower-gradient tributary water in the Frances subdrainage as the better fish habitat, ahead of the open mainstem. A cascade and roughly 3 m falls lower in Forster Creek block fish movement up from the Columbia, so anything holding this high in the system is a resident or lake-connected population, not a fresh mainstem migrant.

The fishing

With 24 records split across three species, Frances reads as the strongest tributary fishery in the Forster system, but the channel-geometry numbers only tell part of the story. Median width runs ~10.6 m (narrow to moderate) on a gentle ~1.42% gradient, with peak mean-annual discharge around 3.516 m³/s (low to moderate flow), geometry that could support easy wading through most of the season. The stronger bet is the lake and wetland-connected side water the habitat inventory flags for fry refuge and rearing, plus the water around the Akenside confluence, rather than pushing the open mainstem end to end.

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Forster Creek tributary
Lake/wetland-connected rearing water
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Stream order 6
~53 km
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24 fish records
Rainbow, brook trout, westslope cutthroat
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Wade
Backroad access, no named trailhead

Frances shares the same cold mountain-creek hatches as the wider Forster system: Stoneflies, Caddisflies (Sedges), Mayflies and summer Terrestrials (Hoppers, Ants, Beetles), plus lake and wetland drift (scuds and chironomids among them) washing down from the connected ponds and side channels upstream. Fish a standard alpine attractor box: a Stimulator or Royal Wulff on top, backed by an Adams, Elk Hair Caddis, Hare's Ear, Prince Nymph and Pheasant Tail beneath, with a small Woolly Bugger for the deeper lake-connected pockets. Kootenay Troutfitters is the nearest established guide presence in the Columbia Valley, though no source ties them specifically to Frances Creek.

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Wetland refuge, and a system cut off from the Columbia

Tributaries flowing from plateau lakes into Frances are flagged as important fry refuge and rearing habitat, and vulnerable to road crossings, grazing and logging disturbance. Don't assume Columbia River fish can quickly repopulate this water: the falls lower in Forster Creek isolate most of the Frances system from the mainstem.

Conditions

  • Navigability: median width ~10.6 m (narrow to moderate), median gradient ~1.42% (gentle), peak mean-annual discharge ~3.516 m³/s (low to moderate flow). The geometry reads as easy wade water; the habitat inventory's real signal is the lake and wetland side channels, not open-channel size.
  • Stocking: no stocking record. Frances runs entirely on wild fish.

Access and the rules

Reach Frances Creek from the Radium Hot Springs or Brisco crossings on Highway 95, via Forster Main and Westside Main, with the Frances Creek Forest Service Road running toward Hurst Creek. No named trailhead or parking area is confirmed, and road condition through this backcountry network is variable, so current road and access status is worth confirming before heading in.

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Before you fish

No Frances Creek-specific exception appears in the checked Region 4 extraction. Regional defaults apply: closed Apr 1 to Jun 14, trout and char catch-and-release Nov 1 to Mar 31, and a single barbless hook required in streams. Confirm the current Region 4 synopsis before you go.