North Fraser
Valley
Some of the best
fishing in the Fraser Valley
is found on the Upper Pitt River as attested to by the frequency
with which steelhead strike at the barbless lures of fly-fishing anglers.
(Fishing is strictly catch-and-release on the Upper Pitt.)
Along Fern Crescent
between Maple Ridge Municipal Park and Golden
Ears Provincial Park, you'll often see anglers patiently casting
for trout from smooth boulders beside the fast-flowing Alouette
River.
River access is from Fern Crescent at one of two municipal locations.
If you visit Golden Ears park with a car-top boat, you can launch
from a small wharf next to the parking area at Mike Lake
and enjoy a quiet paddle. The wharf is also a good place to toss
in a fishing line
At Rolley
Lake Provincial Park, anglers have as much competition from
blue herons as from each other. You can toss in a line from many
points along a trail that runs around the perimeter of the lake,
beginning from a modest beach and boat launch in the day-use parking
lot. (Powerboats are not allowed on Rolley Lake.) Docks jut out
into the lake at several locations, from which anglers can toss
in a line. Although the lake is well stocked early in the season
with rainbow and cutthroat trout, it is often fished out by late
summer. The catch limit is two per day.
Kanaka Creek
is one of the healthiest sportfishing channels in the North Fraser
Valley. Steelhead, sea-run cutthroat trout, and chum and coho salmon
are all found below the 240th Street Bridge where a fish-counting
fence is located. Angling is not permitted upstream from this point.
A provincial freshwater fishing licence is required on this section
of the creek and a federal tidal-fishing licence is needed to fish
the Fraser from the mouth of the creek.
Coho and chum
salmon spawn in the Stave River in late October and November,
a good time for visiting and viewing. Wide spawning channels have
been dug on each side of the river. The best place to begin is the
Ruskin Recreation Area. To reach it, take Lougheed
Hwy (Hwy 7) east of Maple
Ridge to the small Fraser River town of Ruskin. Turn north as
if heading to Rolley Lake Provincial Park. Drive a short distance
to the Ruskin Dam. Follow Ruskin Road east across the top of the
dam and descend 0.6 mile (1 km) down to the site gates. A gated
boat launch is on your left as you enter; car-top boats can be launched
here. A short trail leads to the Stave River, where a wooden footbridge
leads across the gravelled spawning channel onto the banks of the
river itself. Looking downstream from the recreation site, you can
see Ruskin's sawmills beside the brown expanse of the Fraser
River.
Both Deer
and Hicks Lakes in Sasquatch
Provincial Park near Harrison
Hot Springs are ideal for angling from a small boat. (Powerboats
are restricted to electric motors on Deer Lake and 10hp is the maximum
permitted on Hicks.) Trout fishing is popular at both stocked lakes,
and also at aptly named Trout Lake closer to the park entrance.
There are boat launches at both Deer and Hicks, whereas only a rough
trail leads downhill from the park road to Trout Lake. If you don't
have a boat, try casting from the shoreline beside the camping area
at Hicks Lake.
South Fraser Valley
Crescent Island
lies on the opposite side of the Fraser River from the Stave River,
and shelters Glen Valley Regional Park's fishing bars from
sight. (A fishing bar is an expanse of riverbed that lies exposed
at low tide.) Glen Valley lies 4.3 miles (7 km) east of Fort
Langley and, together with Derby Reach Regional Park, offers some
of the best saltwater fishing on this section of the Fraser River.
Head east from Fort Langley along 88th Avenue: Two-Bit Bar
is located at the intersection of 88th Avenue and 272nd Street.
Follow River Road east of Two-Bit Bar to reach Poplar and Duncan
Bars, a total distance one way of about 2.5 miles (4 km) between
the three sites. Of the park's three fishing bars, Poplar Bar is the
largest and offers the most interesting options. You can fish, launch
a car-top boat, and explore several riverside trails.
Derby Reach
Regional Park sits across the Fraser River from the entrance
of Kanaka Creek. The park's Edgewater Bar is a big attraction
to anglers of all ages who come to set their lines for salmon and
watch the Fraser River flow by. Fishing bars that were once prevalent
along the Fraser have more recently been usurped by log booms, which
makes Edgewater even more valuable. What gives this park top billing
are the squares of melmac inlaid at the corner of each picnic table.
This is the officially sanctioned place to clean your salmon. Just
the sight of it raises one's hopes.
Anglers congregate
near the south end of the Mission Bridge in Matsqui
Trail Regional Park. This is the great divide in the Fraser
River. Upstream from the nearby Canadian Pacific Railway bridge
anglers must carry a provincial freshwater licence, while downstream
from it the feds want you to carry a tidal-fishing licence. Take
your pick or carry both. Sturgeon, coho and chinook salmon, steelhead,
and cutthroat trout await your cast. The GVRD requests that anglers
not use the picnic tables to prepare bait or clean fish (no melmac
inserts here yet).
With the autumn
rains comes the rising of water levels in Lower Mainland rivers
and creeks. Then the welcome mat is out for schools of salmon that
have been waiting for just such a seasonal occurrence to begin the
journey upstream to their spawning grounds. As you drive the Chilliwack
River Road, you pass beside the Chilliwack
River. At these times you'll encounter riverbanks lined with
expectant fishermen waiting to intercept them. There are frequent
Forest Service recreation sites along the road where anglers can
park and easily reach the river. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police
station themselves by the bridge at Vedder Crossing, carefully scrutinizing
the contents of cars for violations of the four-coho-per-day catch
limit. A fish hatchery is located beside the river, 13 miles (21
km) east of the Vedder bridge. Fishing is not allowed in the river
between the hatchery and Chilliwack Lake.
Beautiful
Steelhead
Photo: Fraser Valley Angler
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Owing to Chilliwack
Lake's year-round chilly water, it attracts serious anglers
in pursuit of various species of surface-feeding trout, including
rainbow, cutthroat, kokanee, and dolly varden char.
Be cautious when out in a small boat as Chilliwack Lake's sparkling
waters are prone to being whipped up by winds that funnel out to
the coast. Lakeside casting is possible from the sandbars at Paleface
and Depot Creeks on the lake's east side.
The Skagit
River is one of the premier rainbow trout rivers in Western
North America. Angling is particularly popular along the Silver-Skagit
Road between 26-Mile Bridge day-use area and Chittenden
Bar day-use area. In addition to these two sites, there's off-road
parking and quick access to the Skagit along the Silver-Skagit Road
at Shawtum, Rhododendron Bar, Strawberry Bar,
and Nepopekum day-use areas for both riverbank and float
angling. A BC freshwater-angling licence must be purchased before
arriving in the park. These are available locally in Hope and Silver
Creek. Fishing is strictly catch-and-release with barbless hooks
on the Skagit River.
Fraser Estuary
Salmon Fishing is the main draw for fishermen in the Lower Mainland
area, both freshwater and saltwater. The Fraser River sockeye salmon
run some years tops 20 million fish. Pushovers for pink hootchies,
pink salmon also arrive in their millions in odd numbered years.
If you wish to get in touch with your primal side, fish the prehistoric
sturgeon of the mighty Fraser River. Your guide will lead you to
one of these ancient fish that may top 500 pounds, and take all
morning to land.
McDonald Beach on Sea Island in Richmond
features a boat launch, a bait shop, and several picnic tables arranged
on a high bank beside the North Arm of the Fraser
River. There's also fishing in Richmond near Steveston,
where a municipal pier juts out into the Fraser at Gilbert's Beach
beside the South Arm Dyke Trail at the foot of No. 2 Road, just
east of the Steveston harbour.
Anglers can
catch salmon, trout, and numerous other species from the shores
of Deas Island Regional Park. The Riverside picnic area is
one of the most popular areas from which to fish. In the summer
months, try your luck for salmon off the BC Ferries Ferry Terminal
in Tsawwassen.
A Tidal Waters Sports Fishing License is required by all
anglers, and is available at most fishing shops.
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