Banks Lake Walleye Fishing

Banks Lake is a 27-mile-long reservoir in central Washington in the United States. Part of the Columbia Basin Project, Banks Lake occupies the northern portion of the Grand Coulee, a formerly dry coulee near the Columbia River, formed by the Missoula Floods during the Pleistocene epoch. Grand Coulee Dam, built by the United States Bureau of Recl…
Banks Lake is a 27-mile-long reservoir in central Washington in the United States. Part of the Columbia Basin Project, Banks Lake occupies the northern portion of the Grand Coulee, a formerly dry coulee near the Columbia River, formed by the Missoula Floods during the Pleistocene epoch. Grand Coulee Dam, built by the United States Bureau of Reclamation on the Columbia River created Franklin D. Roosevelt Lake, the reservoir on the river behind the dam. The surface of Lake Roosevelt is several hundred feet above the original Columbia River, making it easier to pump water 280 feet up and out of the river's canyon into the adjacent Grand Coulee. Two low earth-fill dams, Dry Falls Dam and North Dam, keep the water in the Grand Coulee, thus creating the reservoir named Banks Lake. It is named after Frank A. Banks, the construction supervisor at Grand Coulee Dam.
  • Location: Grant / Douglas counties, Washington, United States
  • Basin countries: United States
  • Max. length: 31 mi (50 km)
  • Surface area: 26,886 acres (10,880 ha) (42 mi²)
  • Average depth: 46 ft (14 m)
  • Max. depth: 177 ft (54 m)
  • Water volume: 1,237,000 acre-feet (1.526×10⁹ m³)
Data from: en.wikipedia.org