Rand Creek is a short, narrow tributary that joins the Templeton River in the Steamboat/Purcell backcountry west of Brisco, in the upper Columbia valley. No current fish records exist for the creek itself in the regional beat data, but an older provincial habitat inventory did net rainbow trout and brook trout out of its lower reach, enough to treat it as a real, if minor, resident trout creek rather than empty water.
The water
Rand Creek drains into the Templeton River, which in turn drains to the Columbia. It is a small stream, stream order 3 (position 3 on a 1-to-6+ scale where 1 is a headwater trickle and 6+ is a full river), with a median channel width of about 1.6 m (narrow), a median gradient of about 0.42% (gentle) and a peak mean annual discharge of roughly 0.062 m³/s (very low flow) across the 8 mapped segments that make up the creek. The Steamboat Mountain fish habitat inventory crew walked from reach 1 up to reach 4 without finding any barrier to fish movement, and classified reaches 4 and 5 as suitable habitat from channel conditions even without direct fish observations there.
The wider Columbia basin is a recognized priority area for at-risk aquatic species, with habitat loss, reduced water quality and quantity, barriers and invasive species named as the main basin-scale pressures, so treating small, cold tributaries like this one carefully matters beyond the creek itself.
The fishing
Electrofishing in reach 1 turned up three rainbow trout and eight eastern brook trout, real if modest evidence of a resident population rather than a blank creek. No further fish records for Rand Creek have surfaced since, so treat any fish you find here as small, wary resident trout and keep handling brief. Given the narrow channel and very low flow, fish it as tight, brushy tributary water: short leaders, small dry/dropper rigs, and a quick, careful release, rather than a trip built around it on its own.
The food base is typical small mountain creek fare: little Stoneflies, Caddisflies (Sedges), small Mayflies, summer Terrestrials (Hoppers, Ants, Beetles), and juvenile trout or micro baitfish and fry wherever the creek connects to larger water. Carry a compact box built around an Adams, Royal Wulff and small Stimulator up top, an Elk Hair Caddis through summer hatches, and a Hare's Ear, Prince or Pheasant Tail underneath. A small black or olive Woolly Bugger covers the deeper pocket water.
Small water, light hands
Conditions
- Navigability: narrow and gentle (median width ~1.6 m, narrow; gradient ~0.42%, gentle; peak mean-annual discharge ~0.062 m³/s, very low flow), consistent with a small headwater-scale tributary rather than a fishable-all-season stream.
- Stocking: no stocking record. Rand Creek runs entirely on wild fish.
Access and the rules
The Brisco crossing on Highway 95 is the gateway into the Templeton and Dunbar backcountry, with a network of tertiary roads running west toward the drainage; expect active logging traffic and confirm current road status before heading in. No named trailhead, parking area or put-in specific to Rand Creek itself is confirmed, so treat any approach here as a scouting trip rather than a mapped-out day. No guide currently lists dedicated Rand Creek trips; Kootenay Troutfitters is the nearest Columbia Valley guide operation for broader trip planning in the area.
