Hermosa: Return of the Native

| Herald Outdoors Editor On July 17, Trout Unlimited (TU) sponsored a media tour of the western branch of the creek, which is scheduled to join the East Fork in the cutthroat-only club in the spring of 2009.

The tour gave TU a chance to tout its support of the creation of a wilderness area in the Hermosa Creek drainage, and show how the cutthroat restoration project could compliment any new wilderness proposal.

"Basically, this project is taking the upper reaches of this river and turning it from a multi-species river to a single-species river," said Ty Churchwell, president of the local Five Rivers chapter of TU.

"This is the kind of thing that can be done only in headwaters, and the result will be that anglers will be able to come up here and experience this water as it was a hundred or more years ago."

http://durangoherald.com/asp-bin/article_generation.asp?article_type=out&article_path=/outdoors/08/out080725_1.htm

DENTRY: Sportsmen push Hermosa area for wilderness status

By Ed Dentry

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

About 28 miles of Hermosa Creek's main stem hold trout, but the native gem is the Colorado River cutthroat, which almost disappeared until a few pure specimens turned up in isolated headwaters.

Ty Churchwell, president of the Five Rivers chapter of TU, says chapter members will help the Division of Wildlife restore the upper five miles as an all-native trout fishery next spring.

"We want the general public to come in here and experience the river the way it was 100 to 150 years ago," Churchwell said.

http://www.rockymountainnews.com/news/2008/jul/22/dentry-sportsmen-push-hermosa-area-for-status/?printer=1/

Forest plan full of holes, critics say

Foes believe roadless-area rules could open 300,000 acres to development.

By Mark Jaffe The Denver Post

Sportsmen's groups are pressuring Gov. Bill Ritter not to sign off on a soon-to-be-proposed rule regulating roadless areas in national forests.

The rule, negotiated by the Ritter administration and the U.S. Forest Service, is expected to protect about 4.1 million acres but potentially open 300,000 acres to development, according to a consortium of conservation groups.

"Ritter tried to make the best of it, but it was already a flawed process," said Dave Peterson, Colorado field director with Trout Unlimited and a member of the task force.

http://origin.denverpost.com/headlines/ci_9965756

OUTDOOR LIFE: It's heatin' up on the rivers

  Any avid fisherman knows the problem of Whirling Disease. This disease, which has affected so many trout populations over the years, is caused by a microscopic parasite. According to Trout Unlimited, “the disease is named for the characteristic swimming behavior that results as the parasite multiplies in the head and spinal cartilage of the infected fish. All species of trout and salmon may be susceptible to whirling disease.”

http://www.snowmasssun.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080722/MISC/746645737/1043&parentprofile=-1

Lots of Water, Lots of Debt

The Pagosa Daily Post is doing an entertaining series on the Dry Gulch Reservoir development. Thanks to Coyote Gulch for the links. Part One: http://www.pagosadailypost.com/news/9040/Lots_of_Water,_Lots_of_Debt,_Part_One/

Part Two: http://www.pagosadailypost.com/news/9049/Lots_of_Water,_Lots_of_Debt,_Part_Two/

Part Three: http://www.pagosadailypost.com/news/9064/Lots_of_Water,_Lots_of_Debt,_Part_Three/

Part Four: http://www.pagosadailypost.com/news/9086/Lots_of_Water,_Lots_of_Debt,_Part_Four/

Part Five: http://www.pagosadailypost.com/news/9103/Lots_of_Water,_Lots_of_Debt,_Part_Five/

A previous water rights application for Dry Gulch was approved in 2004, based on a 35,000 acre-foot reservoir — plus the right to refill the reservoir with up to 64,000 acre-feet of water pumped from the San Juan River.  That decree by Judge Greg Lyman — which curiously took place just as Archuleta County voters were turning down a ballot measure to fund Dry Gulch — was subsequently appealed to the Colorado Supreme Court by non-profit fishing organization Trout Unlimited.  The Supreme Court remanded the case back to Lyman for additional findings of fact, citing several key problems with Lyman’s original decree.

Dentry: Natural gas drilling hurting land

By Ed Dentry Rocky Mountain News

July 22, 2008

"While there is little to no relationship between the price of gasoline and development of natural gas on public lands - which is what most of this development has been about, as opposed to oil - our rush to produce short-term energy supplies can have a profound effect on the fish and wildlife habitats and water supplies that define the West," said Chris Wood, a Trout Unlimited executive.

http://www.rockymountainnews.com/news/2008/jul/22/feverish-natural-gas-drilling-has-wreaked-havoc/

Let’s Not Mix Oil and Water

By David Nickum

Colorado Trout Unlimited Executive Director

 

Coloradans are feeling the pain of the energy crunch, and the state is doing its part to address our energy needs.  But oil and gas aren’t the most valuable resources in this state by any measure. Without clean water, life - let alone economic growth – is impossible.

 

After eight years of record drilling increases, our elected representatives have ordered the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission to update its rules to provide protections for wildlife and public health. No industry likes change. But in its attempts to influence the rulemaking process, the oil and gas industry has built a PR campaign based on scare tactics and wildly inaccurate statements opposing some very reasonable new natural resource protections. Unfortunately, it seems to be working. For the time being, state officials have backpedaled and retracted some common sense proposals, particularly in regard to an issue important to all Coloradans, the protection of our rivers, streams, and lakes.

 

Colorado is famous for the quality of our water and the spectacular landscapes that support our wildlife. This is the real foundation basis of our economy’s strength, and the foundation for sustainable industries such as hunting and angling.   In Colorado, fishing alone generates an estimated $1.4 billion in annual economic activity and supports more than 11,000 jobs. But the health of our rivers touches all of us – delivering drinking water to our cities, providing irrigation water for our farms, sustaining the riparian corridors needed by 65 percent of our wildlife species, and providing scenic and recreational values that make Colorado one of America’s best places to live.

 

As recent incidents clearly demonstrate, oil and gas development can pose significant  risks to water quality.  A series of spills in the Parachute Creek drainage last winter sent slugs of sediment and an unknown cocktail of chemicals downstream. We don’t know the exact chemicals; industry won’t disclose that information because they claim it’s a trade secret. But we do know that these substances can smother the stream gravels that are essential habitat for fish spawning, and wipe out the aquatic insects on which they feed.

 

Moreover, drillers use chemicals and produce byproducts that can create human health problems, such as the increased cancer risks from exposure to benzene, as noted in a recently released study of health issues in Garfield County. The state is currently investigating four companies for a spill that contaminated a Garfield County spring and drinking water supply that made its owner ill. As with spills on the Roan Plateau this winter, the companies implicated in the spill failed to report it to state officials in a timely fashion.

 

In light of these events, it seems remarkable that the industry’s ferocious lobbying campaign seems to be working. Initially, the Commission proposed requiring oil and gas activities to leave 300-foot buffers for all of Colorado’s waters, with the opportunity to make exceptions by consulting with the Division of Wildlife.  The Commission recently weakened those draft rules to cover only cutthroat trout and Gold Medal streams.  With the stroke of a pen 95% of Colorado’s waterways lost even the most reasonable protections.

 

Buffer strips are not just a matter of common sense; they’re required by local governments for almost all industrial and residential development.  Even backpackers on our National Forest lands are expected to set up their camps at least 100 feet from any water source. Does it make any sense to grant a chemical-dependent, accident-prone major industry this kind of exemption? Of course not.

           

Colorado’s energy reserves are a valuable resource that should – and will – be developed regardless of new regulations.  But our waters are an even more precious resource that will sustain us long after the rigs have packed up and moved on. Asking drillers to respect our water and the life that depends on it is merely responsible government. Asking anything less is not enough.

 

 

Call For Volunteers

As if you didn’t already have plenty to do this summer, we’d like to add another activity to your calendar. The Buffalo Peaks Volunteer Weekend Camping Extravaganza will be July 26 and 27. I know, we’ve set dates for this no less than three times before, but this time we’re sure. Absolutely. Positively. Unless something comes up. Like the water level. Or bad weather. Or some other unpredictable act of Mother Nature!

Volunteers can expect the work to be mildly strenuous. We’ll be planting willows, creating seeding and netting areas, and removing old fences. Plan on bringing a hat, sunglasses, sunscreen, work gloves and perhaps a change of clothes. More details as we get closer.

We’re going to have some fun too! Mainly, we’ll reserve some time for fishing, but we’d also like to know if people are interested in staying over on Saturday night - camping at BPR or lodging in Fairplay. This would allow us to incorporate a volunteer dinner. Of course, volunteers should feel free to give whatever time they can spare on either day.

If you’re interested in volunteering, please email Sinjin Eberle at: sinjin.eberle@gmail.com

What is your vision for water education in Colorado?

A task force of dedicated individuals has drafted a report about the status of water education in Colorado and recommendations to improve water education. They are seeking your comments on this draft and invite you to ask your peers and colleagues to do the same. The success of this report will depend on your input.Access the draft report online at http://cwcb.state.co.us (under the CWCB News section) or call the Colorado Alliance for Environmental Education at (303) 273-9527. Give feedback in writing or by e-mail (info@caee.org) by July 16.

You are also welcome to join a meeting on Tuesday [7/15] from 9-11 a.m. at Denver Water to discuss this report and provide your input in person.

If you can attend, please make a reservation by sending an email to info@caee.org or calling (303) 273-9527.

Trout Unlimited boosts fish in Canon City

By CHRIS WOODKATHE PUEBLO CHIEFTAIN

Trout Unlimited is trying to raise money to improve fish habitat on the Arkansas River through Canon City.

The Southern Colorado Greenback Chapter is trying to complete fundraising for the $20,000 project, which will create weirs, “J-hooks” and boulder clusters on the Arkansas River between Ninth Street and Raynolds Avenue in Canon City, said Ted Sillox, project coordinator.

http://www.chieftain.com/articles/2008/07/08/news/local/doc4872f6be32e9b629083968.txt