McKian Creek is the main named tributary of Cooper Creek, within the Duncan Lake watershed in BC's East Kootenay backcountry. NRCan lists it as an official Kootenay Land District creek at 50.182222, -117.075, and the local drainage index maps it as a 17 km, fourth-order stream with Spokane Creek as its own smaller child tributary.
The water
McKian runs stream order 4 (mid-range in the network, on a scale that runs from 1 for a headwater trickle up to 6 or more for a full river), stretching roughly 17 km before it joins Cooper Creek. Provincial fish-inventory data records 12 direct observations here, all Bull Trout, a clean signal for a small backcountry tributary. A 2013 Kootenay Lake bull trout monitoring appendix also lists a historic McKian Creek redd count of 53 fish under the wider Cooper Creek system survey, a spawning-survey number from the past rather than a promise of current abundance or catch rates.
The fishing
With bull trout as the only species recorded here, McKian is char water, and conservation-first water at that. If it is open and legal to fish, keep it to small-creek dry-dropper searching along the margins, and stay well clear of visible redds and staging fish; low or warm water should end the day's plan entirely. No McKian Creek-specific fishing-guide coverage has been found, so treat nearby Duncan and Lardeau operators as regional context rather than creek-specific service.
The practical food model for a small bull trout tributary like this runs on sculpins and fry, juvenile trout, stonefly nymphs, caddis, Mayflies, midges and terrestrials, the standard cold-tributary mix rather than anything McKian-specific. Where it is open and ethical to fish, Elk Hair Caddis, Adams, Stimulator, Prince Nymph, Hare's Ear, Pheasant Tail and a small Woolly Bugger or sparse sculpin/fry streamer cover the water.
Bull trout: handle with care on a conservation creek
Conditions
- Navigability: the channel-geometry numbers (median width ~10.1 m, moderate; gradient ~4.53%, moderate to steep; peak mean-annual discharge ~3.654 m³/s, low flow) describe a small, tumbling backcountry tributary rather than open drift water.
- Stocking: no stocking record. McKian Creek runs entirely on wild fish.
Access and the rules
No official trailhead, road status or parking area has been confirmed for McKian Creek. The Goat Range Park management plan names the east ridge of McKian Creek and nearby Meadow Mountain as a proposed viewpoint toward Mount Cooper, and allows some multi-use backcountry access in that area, but that is planning-document context rather than a confirmed public route to the creek itself. Confirm current road, snow, trail, bear and park-use conditions before treating this drainage as reachable fishing water.
