David Lake

David Lake is a large (3893 acre) lake located 146km NNW of Sandy Bay and 402km NNE of Prince Albert.

The lake was officially named on 1932-07-06.

Lake Trout Northern Pike Walleye Lake Whitefish Burbot
Boundary on map.

Details

Fishing Zone: Northern Zone
Location: 56.610140557551, -103.54037185314
Shore Length: 82km
Surface Area: 3893 acres

About this page

Hi, this is Matthew Siemens. I wrote and compiled the data on this page from a variety of sources. Sources include government websites and data sources, public websites, personal experience, and user-submitted information. References for this page.

No AI is used to generate content anywhere on this site.

Discussion and Ratings

Rating

Feedback

Directions to David Lake

Events

I don't know of any events at this time.

Map

Explore David Lake with our interactive map.

Fishing at David Lake

David Lake is in the northern fishing zone.

What fish are in David Lake

Burbot, Lake Trout, Lake Whitefish, Northern Pike and Walleye can be found in David Lake.

Learn all about fishing in Saskatchewan here.

Fishing Season

Fishing season on David Lake is open from May 25, 2024 to April 15, 2025.

Fishing Limits for David Lake

These are the limits for all fish species reported to be in David Lake. All fishing limits for Saskatchewan.
Species Limit
Burbot Limit 8
Lake Trout Limit 3, only one may exceed 65 cm
Lake Whitefish Limit 8
Northern Pike Limit 5, only one may exceed 75 cm
Walleye/Sauger/Saugeye Limit 4, only one may exceed 55 cm

Boating at David Lake

I don't have any boat launches, or marinas reported for this lake. Let me know if I'm missing one!

Camping at David Lake

I don't have any campgrounds reported for this lake. Let me know if I'm missing one!

Beaches at David Lake

I don't have any beaches reported for this lake. Let me know if I'm missing one!

Photos

I don't have any photos of David Lake. If you have any you are able to share please upload them.

Bathymetric (Depth) Charts for David Lake

Old Provincial Bathy Charts

These maps were produced by the government a long time ago, using primitive methods. They are not intended for navigation and should not be expected to be accurate.