Located on the 60th parallel on the border of Saskatchewan and The Northwest Territories, Scott Lake is 40 kilometers long by 40 kilometers wide and has an extraordinary number of bays, over 500 islands and countless nooks and crannies that are home to some of the largest pike and lake trout in all of Canada. Surrounded by a stunning shoreline of birch trees, jackpines, sand eskers and untouched wilderness, Scott Lake's bottom topography is as diverse as its top. Submerged islands, reefs, rock piles, dropoffs to 170 ft. and shallow, 3-ft. bays offer ideal habitat for trophy fish in all weather conditions and throughout the season. Accessible only by float plane and managed for catch and release, Scott Lake has evolved to its prime ecological potential. The fishery and the ratio of large to small fish are the best that nature can produce.


Scott Lake is -- and will always be -- a trophy fishing lake. To maintain the quality of our fishery, and to ensure the intimacy we know you desire from a trip like this, we limit the number of guests at our lodge to only 24 per week. With more than 10,000 acres per boat, it's easy to feel you have the whole lake to yourself, especially when you don't see another boat all day. There are many days at Scott when upto sixteen guests decide to flyout for the day, in which case maybe half a dozen boats roam the entire lake. Another major factor contributing to Scott's renowned productivity is our long-standing barbless hook, Catch-and-Release policy. Every fish taken out of Scott Lake is put back for the enjoyment of those to follow (except for the smaller, tastier volunteers that become delicious fresh fish shore lunches prepared by your guide). The trophy fish are still swimming. The big ones literally die of old age. Only in the far north...