Lake Scott Catfish Tournament
Starting date:
Event Details
Annual Channel Catfish Contest on Lake Scott located in Lake Scott State Park, Scott City, Kansas.
Location:
Lake Scott State Park
State Park Permits are required to enter the Lake Scott State Park.
Date/Time Information:
Poles may be in the water at 9:00 a.m. on Saturday! Fisherman must be in line to weigh at 11:59 a.m. on Sunday, Sept. 17th at the conclusion of the tournament.
Cash Prizes!
2023 Entry fee: Adult: $35.00 Youth (12 and under) $10.00, make checks payable to Scott City Area Chamber of Commerce. Mail entry form to: SCACC 113 E. 5th St., Scott City, KS 67871
Lake Scott Catfish Tournament
Phone : 620-872-3525 Ext. 1 (Always call and confirm events.)
Fax : 620-872-2242
Email Address : sccc@wbsnet.org
Web: chamber.scottcityks.org/
Fishing Tournaments
Attractions and Upcoming Events
Cattle Feeding Industry
See the multi-million dollar cattle feeding industry in action. Visit a feedlot and see how modern equipment and management work hand-in-hand to produce food for a nation. Scott County ranks #1 in cattle feeding counties in Kansas.
Scott City, KS AgricultureSquaw's Den Cave, The Last Indian Battle in Kansas
Travel to the place where the last Indian battle in Kansas took place. Punished Woman Fork is about a mile southeast of Lake Scott State Park. It is marked by a monument over a cave known as Squaw's Den where Indian women and children hid while warriors waited in ambush for the US Calvary.
Scott City, KS BattlesitesKeystone Gallery
The Keystone Gallery is housed in the historic limestone building built in 1917 as a community church. It houses a prehistoric museum with late Cretaceous fossils from the Kansas Niobrara formation, a curio shop, featured artwork by Charles Bonner, and information about Monument Rocks.
Scott City, KS MuseumsEl Quartelejo Pueblo Ruins
See the northernmost pueblo in the United States and one of the first white settlements in Kansas: El Quartelejo Ruins. In the 1500s a group of Taos Indians migrated to the park region. They made pueblos and grew crops using irrigation ditches dug from a nearby spring. After 20
Scott City, KS Archaeology