The Field Journal
Rivers & Lakes · Stocked Stillwater

Jade Lake

A small, clear stocked stillwater in the Columbia Valley, sitting between the Templeton River and Dunbar Creek. Rainbow trout have been planted here since 1960, and the modern program is a steady annual top-up of Pennask-strain yearlings.

Jade Lake is a small stocked rainbow trout stillwater in the Columbia Valley, sitting between the Templeton River and Dunbar Creek. It carries the official waterbody identifier 00123COLR, placing it in the Columbia River watershed group alongside its two better-documented neighbors.

The water

The province's 1971 reconnaissance survey put Jade Lake at 13.8 hectares, with a maximum depth of 11.9 m and a mean depth of 3.8 m across the basin. A Secchi reading of 11 m is exceptionally clear for a Kootenay stillwater, close to the bottom of its deepest point, which points to a low-nutrient lake with limited algae and a fish population that can see a leader a long way off.

Stocking

For an angler judging whether Jade Lake is worth the drive, the release record is the fishing report. Provincial hatchery data logs 67 releases into Jade Lake between 1960 and 2026, totalling roughly 222,500 rainbow trout, the lake's only stocked species throughout that record. The modern program is a steady annual top-up: 1,000 Pennask-strain yearlings a spring, most recently released May 12, 2026 from the Beaver hatchery source. Strains have shifted over the decades (Fraser Valley, Tunkwa, Genier, Badger and Premier stock all appear earlier in the record), but the current program has held to Pennask yearlings for several consecutive years, so every fish in the lake now is part of the same annual cohort rather than a mixed-age holdover population.

Stocking record

Jade Lake — 222,565 fish stocked, 1960–2026

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

YearRainbow Trout
20261,000
20251,000
20241,000
20231,000
20221,000
20211,000
20201,000
20191,000
20181,000
20171,000
20161,000
20151,000
20141,000
20131,000
20121,000
20111,000
20101,000
20091,000
20081,000
20071,000
20061,000
20051,000
20043,000
20033,000
20023,000
20013,000
20003,000
19993,000
19983,000
19973,000
19964,000
19954,000
19944,000
19934,000
19924,000
19914,000
19902,000
19892,000
19882,000
19872,000
19862,000
19854,000
19845,000
19835,000
19824,000
19814,000
19804,000
19794,000
19784,000
19775,000
19765,000
197510,000
19748,000
19736,000
19728,000
197112,000
19708,000
19698,000
19688,000
19664,400
19654,000
19645,075
19632,665
19625,600
19614,800
19604,025

The fishing

Jade Lake fishes as a straightforward put-grow stillwater: the yearlings planted each spring are the fish you catch that season, growing on the lake's natural forage rather than arriving pre-grown. Work the shoals and any drop-off structure with a Chironomid under an indicator early in the season (Chironomid Under Indicator is the standard rig), and expect the very clear water (Secchi 11 m) to reward a long leader, light tippet and a careful approach over splashy casting. A Woolly Bugger or small leech pattern worked along deeper water is a reasonable second line once the shallows warm, following the general Hot-Weather Stillwater Tactics approach used on comparable Kootenay put-grow lakes.

waves
13.8 ha stillwater
Columbia River watershed
water
Max 11.9 m, mean 3.8 m
1971 survey, Secchi 11 m
egg
Rainbow trout
67 releases since 1960, ~222,500 fish
set_meal
Pennask yearlings
1,000 fish, annual spring plant
gavel

Before you fish

No water-specific exception is listed for Jade Lake in the Region 4 synopsis, so the regional default stillwater quotas apply: trout/char 5 daily (max 1 rainbow trout over 50 cm). A freshwater licence is required for anglers 16 and over. Confirm current rules in the official synopsis before you fish.

Access and the rules

No boat launch, parking area or trailhead has been confirmed for Jade Lake. It sits in the Columbia Valley backcountry between the Templeton River and Dunbar Creek drainages, a part of the region reached from backroads off Highway 95 near Brisco; confirm a legal approach and any private-land or seasonal restrictions locally before committing a day to it.

Conditions

  • Depth: the 1971 provincial survey found Jade Lake shallow to moderate overall (mean 3.8 m) with a deeper basin reaching 11.9 m, and exceptionally clear water for the Kootenays (Secchi 11 m).
  • Stocking: a continuous rainbow trout program since 1960, now running as an annual plant of 1,000 Pennask-strain yearlings; no other species has been stocked here.