The Field Journal
Rivers & Lakes · Horsethief Creek Tributary

McDonald Creek (Columbia River Watershed)

A narrow, wade-only tributary of Horsethief Creek in the Columbia Valley, and one of three BC waters named McDonald Creek. Provincial fish-inventory data confirms a resident rainbow trout population here, the clearest direct fish signal among the smaller Horsethief-family creeks, though public access and current fishery condition remain unconfirmed.

McDonald Creek flows into Horsethief Creek in the Columbia Valley, one of three BC waters carrying the name, alongside unrelated creeks in the Duncan and Upper Arrow Lake watersheds. Provincial fish-inventory data confirms 9 direct rainbow trout records here, the clearest single-species signal among the smaller creeks in the Horsethief family.

The water

McDonald Creek's confluence sits at 50.52515, -116.44433, within the wider Horsethief Creek tributary group that also includes Paulding Creek, Stockdale, Bruce, Law, Farnham, Red Line, Gopher, Andreen, Haultain and Fan creeks. It drains toward the Columbia River by way of Horsethief Creek. It runs stream order 5 (well down the network toward river scale, on a system that runs from 1 for a headwater trickle up to 6 or more for a full river) across roughly 126 mapped channel segments. The channel geometry reads narrow to moderate and moderately steep: median width around 8.1 m (narrow to moderate), median gradient around 5.88% (moderate to steep), and peak mean-annual discharge around 2.627 m³/s (low to moderate flow), consistent with a small, wade-only mountain tributary.

The fishing

The confirmed fish signal here is 9 rainbow trout records, a real and direct population count rather than an inferred one, which sets McDonald apart from Horsethief siblings like Gopher Creek that carry no direct record at all. That said, a small record count from a small tributary does not establish current abundance or the population's connection to Horsethief Creek proper, so treat it as a confirmed presence to scout rather than a proven numbers water. Typical food through the Horsethief system is Mayflies, Caddisflies (Sedges), small Stoneflies and summer Terrestrials (Hoppers, Ants, Beetles), the practical starting point on McDonald until a more specific hatch report turns up.

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Horsethief tributary
Into Horsethief Creek, then the Columbia
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Stream order 5
~126 mapped segments
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Rainbow trout
9 local fish-inventory records
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Narrow, wade-only
~8.1 m median width
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Three creeks, one name

This McDonald Creek drains into Horsethief Creek in the Columbia Valley. Two other, unrelated McDonald Creeks sit in the Duncan and Upper Arrow Lake watersheds, so confirm the map pin before planning around any of them.

Small-stream attractors and naturals are the sensible starting point: an Adams, Elk Hair Caddis, Royal Wulff or Stimulator up top, and a Hare's Ear or Prince Nymph and Pheasant Tail underneath.

Conditions

  • Navigability: narrow to moderate width, moderate to steep gradient (median width ~8.1 m; gradient ~5.88%; peak mean-annual discharge ~2.627 m³/s, low to moderate flow), consistent with a small, wade-scale mountain tributary rather than boat water.
  • Stocking: no stocking record. McDonald Creek runs entirely on wild fish.

Access and the rules

No named trailhead, put-in or parking area has been confirmed for this McDonald Creek. It sits within the broader Horsethief Creek forest road network in the Columbia Valley, and anyone exploring it should treat approach and land tenure as unconfirmed until checked on the ground.

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Before you fish

No McDonald Creek-specific exception appears in the checked Region 4 rules, so the regional default applies: streams are closed Apr 1 to Jun 14, trout and char are catch-and-release from Nov 1 to Mar 31, and a single barbless hook is required on all streams. Confirm the current Region 4 synopsis and any in-season notices before fishing.