Fairchild Pond vs Mead Lake
Water quality, depth, fish species, and recreation comparison.
Fairchild Pond has a higher water quality grade (C, Fair) than Mead Lake (F, Very Poor). Both are in Wisconsin.
Fairchild Pond and Mead Lake are both in Wisconsin — a same-state head-to-head where the comparison comes down to lake-specific differences in depth, watershed, and monitoring history rather than the broader state-level water-quality regime. The grades are meaningfully apart: Fairchild Pond grades a C while Mead Lake grades a F. That two-letter spread reflects real underlying differences — different watershed inputs, different depth profiles, or different monitoring rigor.
For a recreational visitor, the wider grade gap is decisive — Fairchild Pond is the better water-quality choice. For a researcher, the gap is the interesting part: what is different about the two watersheds, and which of those differences is mutable?
Fairchild Pond
No clarity data.
Mead Lake
Very murky, less than 2 ft of visibility.
Side-by-Side Metrics
| Metric | Fairchild Pond | Mead Lake |
|---|---|---|
| Overall Grade | C (Fair) | F (Very Poor) |
| Water Clarity | No data | 2 ft |
| Phosphorus | 30.4 µg/L | 208 µg/L |
| Chlorophyll-a (Algae) | No data | No data |
| Maximum Depth | - | - |
| Surface Area | 18 acres | 320 acres |
| Public Access | Unknown | Unknown |
| Fish Species | 0 | 0 |
| Trophic State | eutrophic | hypereutrophic |
Bold value = better for that metric (lower phosphorus / chlorophyll = cleaner; higher Secchi / depth / species count = better).
Verdict
Fairchild Pond wins on overall water quality with a Grade C versus Mead Lake's Grade F. For fishing diversity, Fairchild Pond also leads with 0 species.