In August 2003, the McLure forest fi re burned 62% of the drainage basin of Fishtrap Creek. Streamfl ow has been measured there since the early 1970s, and suspended sediment concentration and channel morphology have been monitored since the fi re. Although the short post-fi re period (four years) limits our ability to draw fi rm conclusions about streamfl ow changes, there has been no obvious increase in peak fl ows since the fi re. However, the total runoff during the freshet period does appear to have increased and the onset of snowmelt appears to occur about two weeks earlier than it did prior to the fi re. Suspended sediment records from Fishtrap Creek and from an unburnt reference stream nearby are similar, suggesting that the burnt areas have remained relatively stable and that the sediment supply to Fishtrap Creek has not been dramatically altered. In contrast, the stream channel morphology has changed, widening by over 100% of the original width in some places and transforming from a laterally stable plane-bed morphology to a laterally active riffl e-pool morphology. The timing and magnitude of the observed morphologic changes are consistent with the predicted decline in bank strength due to root decay, implying that the observed changes are associated with an internal instability associated with changes to the stream boundaries, rather than with the more typically reported externally driven instabilities caused by changes in streamfl ow or sediment supply. This delayed response in the absence of large changes in streamfl ow or sediment supply, while 'unusual' in that it has not been documented in the previous literature, may be a common mode of response, particularly in wat'ersheds with nival fl ow regimes.