Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 21, 1955
Fishing at Crater Lake
National Park
By Joseph C. Hunt, Seasonal Ranger
Photos by C. Warren Fairbanks
PART I - STREAMS
Many park visitors are interested in
the fishing conditions here in Crater Lake National Park. In most cases,
fishing is limited. For example, the streams are very hard to reach.
Annie Creek and Castle Creek are cut into steep canyons with sheer
walls. Brush is also a handicap to the fisherman. Sand Creek at the East
Entrance, where the pinnacles are located, is a prime example of stream
conditions; this stream can be seen from the highway.
Small rainbow trout, Salmo gairdneri
irideus Gibbons, and eastern brook trout, Salvelinus fontinalis
(Mitchill) are abundant in the streams. The size of the trout caught in
these streams averages about eight inches. One of the reasons for the
smallness of the trout is that the snow pack is very deep in these
canyons, reducing the food supply by covering the streams. From late in
July until September, these streams are usually free from snow.
Bait fishing is a good standby that
brings fine results. Fly fishing is almost useless because of the brush
cover in the area. Spin fishing is difficult, the streams being too
small.
If the hardy fisherman can overcome
these handicaps, however, he should be able to catch his limit of ten
fish in these beautiful mountain brooks.
PART II - THE LAKE
Crater Lake, in addition to being one
of the most beautiful lakes in the world and, according to some, one of
the seven natural wonders of the earth, is also one of the most
interesting as far as angling is concerned.
There are two main types of fish in the
lake. The first is the landlocked red, sockeye, or kokanee salmon,
Oncorhynchus nerka kennerlyi (Suckley), which I do not consider to
be a good type of fish for this lake. They do not grow very large, and,
as far as angling is concerned, I can not consider them game fish. These
fish range between nine and thirteen inches in length. Very seldom is a
fish caught that is larger or smaller. They are small in body structure
and weigh little for their size.

Sockeye salmon from Crater Lake
|
The rainbow trout, Salmo gairdneri
irideus Gibbons, in Crater Lake, however, is a much different fish
in comparison with the salmon. This fish grows large and is a vicious
fighter. Like most lakes that fishermen enjoy, Crater Lake could be one
of their favorites if they understood the habits of the rainbow trout in
this lake. The park visitor who fishes in the lake is usually not
familiar with the habits of these trout. Therefore, many draw a wrong
conclusion about the great fishing that Crater Lake offers.
The length of the rainbow ranges
between fifteen and one-half and twenty-three inches, the average
measuring nineteen inches and weighing about three pounds. These fish
are deep feeders, the reason being that the summer is so short that
surface feeding for bugs is limited. Some say the water is so clear
that, in order to escape the rays of the sun, they have to seek shelter
in deep water or under overhanging rocks.
Trolling at around seventy feet deep
produces fine results; however, it is not great sport because of the
weight of the spoons and sinkers. Spin fishing is the sport in the lake.
With a light spinning rod and a light-test line, using a quarter-ounce
lure, a fisherman will have a wonderful time on the lake; but along with
all this, he will have many heartaches.

23-3/4-inch rainbow trout taken from Crater Lake
in August, 1954 |
The mouths of the trout are very soft.
Once hooked, these fish break water and in two or three jumps are
usually free. The fisherman can expect to land one of every five that he
hooks. There have been many stories which attempt to explain their
tearing loose so easily. One possible suggestion is that the lack of
minerals in the water has a weakening effect on the cartilage of their
mouths. As a sidelight, let me describe one of the strangest things
about the rainbow trout in Crater Lake. Once free, after breaking loose
from the hook, they continue to jump and break water, sometimes three
feet into the air. They may do this five or six times. An explanation
for this might be that their mouths are so soft that, having been torn
by the hook, they are actually in pain.
Very seldom does a fisherman catch a
large rainbow on a flyrod using artificial flies. Using a fly road
limits one in the length of cast. Also, the fish sees the movement
through the clear water and will not strike. Anglers have spent days on
the lake without seeing a fish rise for a live bug or fly. This seems
strange for a lake that has been stocked many years with rainbow trout.
Unless certain problems are solved in
the future, good fishing in the lake may cease. Crater Lake can not
stand heavy fishing; the fish do not reproduce in quantity. Contrary to
popular opinion, I believe that lack of food is not the handicap to
reproduction in this lake. There are many types of underwater life for
the fish to feed on.
The grave problem is the absence of
adequate spawning grounds. There are no known inlets or outlets to
Crater Lake, providing an unfavorable situation for spawning trout. They
must, therefore, find nesting grounds in the lake. There are located
around its edges a few sandy beaches that otherwise would be ideal, but
the wind creates such choppy water that the roe would be washed away.
The light pumicesand also shifts around in the water. The spawner
probably lays her eggs in the holes and cracks of the steep walls around
the shores of the lake. This is not an ideal situation, because the eggs
have little protection from other fish. When the eggs have hatched, the
fingerlings fall prey to their own cannibalistic kind; apparently few
escape this fate. If the fish that do escape and reach maturity are
caught by the angler, then the supply may be exhausted.

Looking toward Mt. Scott from Sinnott Memorial
From
Kodachrome by Welles & Welles