Garland Creek is a short, steep tributary of Howser Creek, which in turn drains toward Duncan Lake and the Duncan River in BC's Region 4. Habitat modelling flags it as Bull Trout water, but no fish observations, guide reports or access information have turned up for the creek itself, so it reads today as a stewardship note rather than a fishing plan.
The water
Garland carries an official Kootenay Land District name (NRCan key JAJPB), sitting at 50.477778, -116.885833 on map sheet 082K07. It runs stream order 2 (near the headwater end of a scale that runs from 1 for the smallest trickle up to 6 or more for a full river) and stretches only about 2 km before joining Howser Creek. No bcfishpass channel-geometry record exists for a creek this small, so width, gradient and discharge figures simply are not available. Provincial fish-inventory data shows zero direct observations on Garland Creek; the bull trout signal comes from the same habitat model that flags Behrman Creek and Big Climb Creek nearby, not from a catch or survey record.
The fishing
There is nothing here to plan a trip around. With no confirmed fish, no access point, and no guide coverage, Garland Creek sits alongside its Howser-side neighbours as a small, cold headwater worth protecting rather than prospecting. If a future field visit or fisheries survey confirms legal public access and fishable water, keep any angling light, stay off redds, and avoid staging or spawning bull trout entirely.
No creek-specific hatch, invertebrate or stomach-content survey has been found for Garland Creek. The likely small-stream food layer, by analogy with the rest of the Howser system, is small Mayflies, Caddisflies (Sedges), Stoneflies and Terrestrials (Hoppers, Ants, Beetles). If a stretch is ever confirmed fishable, a small Prince Nymph, Elk Hair Caddis, Stimulator, Adams, Royal Wulff or small Woolly Bugger would cover a modest box, but that remains a hypothesis, not a tested pattern list.
Bull trout habitat: protect it, don't prospect it
Access and the rules
No named access point, trailhead or launch has been confirmed for Garland Creek. It sits inland from the Duncan Lake shoreline in country reached generally through the Howser Creek drainage, but nothing ties a specific road or trail to Garland itself. Do not assume public access; confirm current land tenure and any seasonal road status before heading in.
