The Project WakeSurf Field Guide to Pike Lake

So you’ve found Pike Lake, that gorgeous blue ribbon 20 km southwest of Perth. Lovely spot, until a ballast boat rolls through and turns it into a milkshake. Grab these Project WakeSurf stats, sprinkle in a few zingers, and impress anyone who thinks a 120-metre-wide lake can host a surf competition.

Project WakeSurf Pike Lake Snapshot

Lake Intel Number Fast Source
Surface Area 3.4 km² Ontario GeoHub
Max Depth 31 m MNRF survey
Average Depth 9 m Same survey
Lake Length ≈ 5.4 km GIS measure
Skinniest Point ≈ 120 m Satellite cross-check
Secchi Clarity (2023) 3.1 m RVCA report
Median Phosphorus 21 µg/L RVCA lab
Wetlands Buffer 62 ha Ducks Unlimited
Fish Species 14 Angler’s Atlas

Project WakeSurf Water Health, Plain Talk Edition

  • See-through score: You can spot your toes at 3 m, but one surf wave and it’s latte-time.
  • Phosphorus flirting with algae: At 21 µg/L, the lake’s juuust shy of a green-slime makeover—wakes tip the scale.
  • Oxygen sweet spot: Perfect for walleye… until someone churns bathtub-warm water into the cool layer.
  • Wetland nerfing: 62 ha of cattails soak up runoff; repeated wave-slap smacks them flat like wet cornflakes.

Pike Lake Party Trivia (Show Off at the Dock)

  • Originally charted as “Grand Lake of the Pikes” in the 1820s. (Someone shortened it; we blame minimalism.)
  • A spring called “Bottomless Kettle” stays glacial in July—perfect for beverage chilling or dare competitions.
  • Last confirmed Blanding’s turtle nesting strip in Lanark County. (Yes, the yellow-throated cutie you can’t legally cuddle.)
  • Hardy waterlilies planted in the ’60s now own 14 % of the shoreline, frog heaven, propeller nightmare.

Why Project WakeSurf Says “Wide Waves Belong on Wide Water”

  • Hallway Fetch: 120 m wide = wave bounce in six seconds; shoreline gets a double smack.
  • Cliff-like Drop: From 3 m to 18 m depth in one boat length—vertically flings sediment like confetti.
  • Bass Cradle Smash: Shallow shelves where bass pick nursery spots crumble under a 0.4 m surf wave.
  • Floating Wetlands Yeet: Big wakes detach cattail mats and send them joy-riding down the lake.


Pike Lake narrows to 120 m. One ballast wave stirs 200 % more silt and boots loon nests in 30 seconds. Surf broad water, protect Pike Lake.