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MN Fish Finder

Kimball

Crow Wing County
Near Jenkins
DOW: 18036100
Largemouth BassExcellent · 83Northern PikeExcellent · 79WalleyeGood · 58

A 190-acre lake near Jenkins in Crow Wing County — best known for bass and pike. Last surveyed 2022.

Fish Species (21)

Largemouth Bass

Excellent · 83

Above-normal numbers · large fish

Electrofishing survey · surveyed Jun 2022

Avg Size
11.1"
Avg Weight
0.97 lbs

Catch rate: 77.7 · Electrofishing survey

Size of catchable largemouth bass44% keeper-size (12"+)
8–11" · 56%Largest sampled 18"
Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Aug 24, 20229.79--
Aug 24, 20221.00--
Aug 24, 20221.17--

Northern Pike

Excellent · 79

Typical numbers · large fish

Gill-net survey · surveyed Jun 2022

Avg Size
24.6"
Avg Weight
3.83 lbs

Catch rate: 6.7 per gill net · typical 2.2–8.7 for a lake like this

Size of catchable northern pike45% keeper-size (24"+)
14–23" · 55%Largest sampled 37"
Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Jun 27, 20220.3324.6"2.51 lbs
Jun 27, 20226.6724.6"3.83 lbs
Jun 27, 20164.8322.1"2.87 lbs

Walleye

Good · 58

Below-normal numbers · large fish

Gill-net survey · surveyed Jun 2022

Avg Size
19.7"
Avg Weight
4.88 lbs

Catch rate: 0.83 per gill net · typical 1–5 for a lake like this

Size of catchable walleye72% keeper-size (15"+)
10–14" · 28%Largest sampled 26"
Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Jun 27, 20220.3319.7"5.10 lbs
Jun 27, 20228.1819.7"1.99 lbs
Jun 27, 20220.8319.7"4.88 lbs

Hybrid Sunfish

Good · 53

Above-normal numbers · small fish

Trap-net survey · surveyed Jun 2022

Avg Size
5.8"
Avg Weight
0.23 lbs

Catch rate: 7.0 per trap net

Size of catchable hybrid sunfish1% keeper-size (8"+)
3–7" · 99%Largest sampled 8"
Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Aug 24, 20221.00--
Aug 24, 20226.52--
Aug 24, 20225.33--

Rock Bass

Average · 49

Typical numbers · average-size fish

Trap-net survey · surveyed Jun 2022

Avg Size
5.4"
Avg Weight
0.20 lbs

Catch rate: 1.2 per trap net · typical 0.8–3.7 for a lake like this

Size of catchable rock bass17% keeper-size (8"+)
4–7" · 83%Largest sampled 8"
Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Aug 24, 20220.33--
Jun 27, 20220.175.4"0.06 lbs
Jun 27, 20221.225.4"0.20 lbs

Smallmouth Bass

Average · 43

Typical numbers

Electrofishing survey · surveyed Jun 2022

Avg Size
14.8"
Avg Weight
2.15 lbs

Catch rate: 3.3 · Electrofishing survey

Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Aug 24, 20221.33--
Jun 27, 20223.2714.8"2.15 lbs
Jun 27, 20161.8318.5"4.12 lbs

Bluegill

Average · 31

Typical numbers · small fish

Trap-net survey · surveyed Jun 2022

Avg Size
4.9"
Avg Weight
0.13 lbs

Catch rate: 17.2 per trap net · typical 7.7–43.4 for a lake like this

Size of catchable bluegill4% keeper-size (8"+)
3–7" · 96%Largest sampled 8"
Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Aug 24, 202211.67--
Aug 24, 20224.89--
Aug 24, 202220.33--

Black Crappie

Average · 29

Typical numbers · small fish

Gill-net survey · surveyed Jun 2022

Avg Size
6.7"
Avg Weight
0.22 lbs

Catch rate: 1.0 per gill net · typical 0.3–1.7 for a lake like this

Size of catchable black crappie0% keeper-size (10"+)
5–9" · 100%Largest sampled 8"
Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Jun 27, 20221.006.7"0.22 lbs
Jun 27, 20220.336.7"0.18 lbs
Jun 21, 20101.448.4"0.43 lbs

Pumpkinseed

Average · 25

Typical numbers · small fish

Trap-net survey · surveyed Jun 2022

Avg Size
5.2"
Avg Weight
0.18 lbs

Catch rate: 2.7 per trap net · typical 1.4–5.9 for a lake like this

Size of catchable pumpkinseed0% keeper-size (8"+)
3–7" · 100%Largest sampled 7"
Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Jun 27, 20222.675.2"0.18 lbs
Jun 27, 20220.675.2"0.16 lbs
Jun 27, 20160.504.6"0.07 lbs

Yellow Perch

Poor · 24

Typical numbers · small fish

Gill-net survey · surveyed Jun 2022

Avg Size
6.1"
Avg Weight
0.12 lbs

Catch rate: 2.8 per gill net · typical 1.5–13.8 for a lake like this

Size of catchable yellow perch0% keeper-size (9"+)
5–8" · 100%Largest sampled 7"
Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Aug 24, 20222.00--
Jun 27, 20222.836.1"0.12 lbs
Jun 27, 20220.226.1"0.13 lbs

Green Sunfish

Poor · 19

Below-normal numbers · small fish

Trap-net survey · surveyed Jun 2022

Avg Size
3.6"
Avg Weight
0.06 lbs

Catch rate: 0.56 per trap net · typical 0.6–2 for a lake like this

Size of catchable green sunfish0% keeper-size (7"+)
3–6" · 100%Largest sampled 4"
Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Aug 24, 20221.17--
Aug 24, 202216.31--
Jun 27, 20220.563.6"0.06 lbs
Other species in this lake (10)

Rough fish, bullheads, and baitfish recorded in DNR surveys — present in the lake, but not typical angling targets.

White Sucker

Good · 60

Typical numbers · large fish

Gill-net survey · surveyed Jun 2022

Avg Size
18.0"
Avg Weight
3.53 lbs

Catch rate: 0.5 per gill net · typical 0.5–2 for a lake like this

Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Jun 27, 20220.5018.0"3.53 lbs
Jun 27, 20220.1118.0"0.93 lbs
Jun 27, 20160.8316.8"2.19 lbs

Shorthead Redhorse

Good · 50

Large fish

Trap-net survey · surveyed Jul 1988

Last surveyed 1988 — treat with caution

Avg Weight
4.50 lbs

Catch rate: 0.75 per trap net · typical 0.4–1.4 for a lake like this

Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Jul 5, 19880.75-4.50 lbs

Black Bullhead

Average · 33

Below-normal numbers · average-size fish

Trap-net survey · surveyed Jun 2004

Last surveyed 2004 — treat with caution

Avg Size
10.0"
Avg Weight
0.65 lbs

Catch rate: 0.11 per trap net · typical 0.3–1.7 for a lake like this

Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Jun 28, 20040.1110.0"0.65 lbs
Jul 6, 19830.67-0.90 lbs

Brown Bullhead

Average · 28

Below-normal numbers · small fish

Trap-net survey · surveyed Jun 2016

Last surveyed 2016 — treat with caution

Avg Size
8.0"
Avg Weight
0.47 lbs

Catch rate: 0.22 per trap net · typical 0.3–1 for a lake like this

Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Jun 27, 20160.228.0"0.47 lbs
Jun 21, 20100.1711.0"1.16 lbs
Jun 21, 20100.2211.0"0.58 lbs

Yellow Bullhead

Average · 25

Below-normal numbers · average-size fish

Trap-net survey · surveyed Jun 2022

Avg Size
10.0"
Avg Weight
0.61 lbs

Catch rate: 0.22 per trap net · typical 1–5.3 for a lake like this

Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Aug 24, 20223.26--
Jun 27, 20220.2210.0"0.61 lbs
Jun 27, 20160.509.9"0.61 lbs

Golden Shiner

Insufficient

Seining survey · surveyed Jul 1994

Last surveyed 1994 — treat with caution

Catch rate: 21.7 · Seining survey

Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Jul 5, 199421.67--

Shiner species

Insufficient

Seining survey · surveyed Jun 2004

Last surveyed 2004 — treat with caution

Catch rate: 50.0 · Seining survey

Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Jun 28, 200450.00--

Bluntnose Minnow

Insufficient

Seining survey · surveyed Aug 2022

Catch rate: 11.3 · Seining survey

Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Aug 24, 202211.33--
Aug 24, 202240.78--
Aug 24, 20226.33--

Johnny Darter

Insufficient

Seining survey · surveyed Aug 2022

Catch rate: 0.33 · Seining survey

Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Aug 24, 20220.33--
Aug 24, 202224.47--
Jun 21, 20100.20--

Iowa Darter

Insufficient

Seining survey · surveyed Aug 2022

Catch rate: 1.2 · Seining survey

Survey History
DateCatch RateAvg LengthAvg Weight
Aug 24, 20221.17--
Aug 24, 202216.31--
Jun 21, 20103.60--

Biologist Notes

August 14, 2024Temperature and dissolved oxygen profiles were collected in the deepest basin in Kimball Lake on August 14, 2024, to evaluate the quantity and quality…

Temperature and dissolved oxygen profiles were collected in the deepest basin in Kimball Lake on August 14, 2024, to evaluate the quantity and quality of cold, oxygenated water (i.e., oxythermal habitat) available to Cisco, also known as Tullibee, the most sensitive coldwater species present in this lake. Cisco require a layer of oxythermal habitat that contains water temperatures below 21.2 degrees C (70.2 degrees F) and dissolved oxygen concentrations above 3.0 mg/L. Based on the profile from the deepest basin, the water temperature decreased to below 21.2 degrees C (70.2 degrees F) at 17.8 feet and the dissolved oxygen concentration decreased to 3.0 mg/L at 26.9 feet at the time of sampling. The thickness of this layer of water in the water column was 9.1 feet, indicating that oxythermal habitat was present for Cisco. Further, the temperature at which dissolved oxygen decreased to 3.0 mg/L (i.e., TDO3, a single variable to characterize oxythermal habitat) was 12.5 degrees C (54.5 degrees F). TDO3 values cooler than 21.2 degrees C (70.2 degrees F) indicate that oxythermal conditions were suitable for Cisco at the time of this survey. Data collected by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources in 2022 and 2023 during the late summer thermal stress period also indicate suitable oxythermal habitat, with the least favorable conditions recorded in 2024. When inadequate oxythermal habitat is available, Cisco are squeezed into unfavorable, warmer water conditions and experience higher levels of stress.

August 14, 2024Temperature and dissolved oxygen profiles were collected in the deepest basin in Kimball Lake on August 14, 2024, to evaluate the quantity and quality…

Temperature and dissolved oxygen profiles were collected in the deepest basin in Kimball Lake on August 14, 2024, to evaluate the quantity and quality of cold, oxygenated water (i.e., oxythermal habitat) available to Cisco, also known as Tullibee, the most sensitive coldwater species present in this lake. Cisco require a layer of oxythermal habitat that contains water temperatures below 21.2 degrees C (70.2 degrees F) and dissolved oxygen concentrations above 3.0 mg/L. Based on the profile from the deepest basin, the water temperature decreased to below 21.2 degrees C (70.2 degrees F) at 17.8 feet and the dissolved oxygen concentration decreased to 3.0 mg/L at 26.9 feet at the time of sampling. The thickness of this layer of water in the water column was 9.1 feet, indicating that oxythermal habitat was present for Cisco. Further, the temperature at which dissolved oxygen decreased to 3.0 mg/L (i.e., TDO3, a single variable to characterize oxythermal habitat) was 12.5 degrees C (54.5 degrees F). TDO3 values cooler than 21.2 degrees C (70.2 degrees F) indicate that oxythermal conditions were suitable for Cisco at the time of this survey. Data collected by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources in 2022 and 2023 during the late summer thermal stress period also indicate suitable oxythermal habitat, with the least favorable conditions recorded in 2024. When inadequate oxythermal habitat is available, Cisco are squeezed into unfavorable, warmer water conditions and experience higher levels of stress.

August 14, 2024Temperature and dissolved oxygen profiles were collected in the deepest basin in Kimball Lake on August 14, 2024, to evaluate the quantity and quality…

Temperature and dissolved oxygen profiles were collected in the deepest basin in Kimball Lake on August 14, 2024, to evaluate the quantity and quality of cold, oxygenated water (i.e., oxythermal habitat) available to Cisco, also known as Tullibee, the most sensitive coldwater species present in this lake. Cisco require a layer of oxythermal habitat that contains water temperatures below 21.2 degrees C (70.2 degrees F) and dissolved oxygen concentrations above 3.0 mg/L. Based on the profile from the deepest basin, the water temperature decreased to below 21.2 degrees C (70.2 degrees F) at 17.8 feet and the dissolved oxygen concentration decreased to 3.0 mg/L at 26.9 feet at the time of sampling. The thickness of this layer of water in the water column was 9.1 feet, indicating that oxythermal habitat was present for Cisco. Further, the temperature at which dissolved oxygen decreased to 3.0 mg/L (i.e., TDO3, a single variable to characterize oxythermal habitat) was 12.5 degrees C (54.5 degrees F). TDO3 values cooler than 21.2 degrees C (70.2 degrees F) indicate that oxythermal conditions were suitable for Cisco at the time of this survey. Data collected by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources in 2022 and 2023 during the late summer thermal stress period also indicate suitable oxythermal habitat, with the least favorable conditions recorded in 2024. When inadequate oxythermal habitat is available, Cisco are squeezed into unfavorable, warmer water conditions and experience higher levels of stress.

Frequently Asked Questions

What fish can you catch in Kimball?

Based on Minnesota DNR survey data, anglers target Largemouth Bass, Northern Pike, Walleye, Hybrid Sunfish, and Rock Bass in Kimball. See the full species list above for catch rates, size structure, and quality scores.

Is there public access at Kimball?

Minnesota DNR records list public access for Kimball. Check the DNR LakeFinder page for the launch type and directions before you go.

How deep is Kimball?

Kimball has a maximum depth of 77 feet, per Minnesota DNR data.

When were the main sport fish in Kimball last surveyed?

The most recent Minnesota DNR survey data for the main sport fish in Kimball is from 2022.

Does Kimball have any invasive species?

Yes — Kimball has confirmed Eurasian watermilfoil and zebra mussel. Clean, drain, and dry your equipment to avoid spreading invasives to other waters.

More lakes in Crow Wing County

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Lake Details

Surface Area
189.78 acres
Max Depth
77 ft
Shoreline
3.05 mi
Public Access
Yes
View on DNR LakeFinder

Invasive Species Alert

  • Eurasian watermilfoil
  • zebra mussel

Clean, drain, and dry your equipment to prevent spread.

Location

46.6538°N, 94.2020°W

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