Why Colorado's headwaters matter

There is a bedrock natural law that anglers and most people understand as common sense-all waters are connected. If we trash or pollute a creek upstream, it could affect downstream conditions as well. That's why the newly proposed rule from the Environmental Protection Agency and Corps of Engineers to restore the coverage of the Clean Water Act is so important to Colorado's quality of life...

Colorado is a headwaters state and we understand that these headwater creeks, while small, are vital to the health of our watersheds, wildlife, and water supply. Their health shapes the condition of everything else downstream. They serve as the lifeblood of Colorado's recreation economy.

In Colorado alone, about 75 percent of rivers and streams-some 76,000 miles of waterways-are seasonal or ephemeral in nature and thus could fall outside the net of CWA protection, putting them at the mercy of filling and dredging operations, oil spills, toxic industrial waste and unregulated development...

Our waters, large and small, are interconnected-and to pretend otherwise is to invite disaster. When we allow polluters to dump toxins or trash upstream waters, we can expect pollution and devastation downstream, in our most prized rivers and streams.

Let's support the Clean Water Act's commonsense protection of our most precious heritage-our home waters.

To read the rest of David Nickum's Guest Commentary, please visit The Denver Post.

Help Save the Fraser - Take Action Today!

The Fraser River is a tributary to the Colorado River and an outstanding wild trout river in its own right.  It is also a stream that has been impacted by years of diversions, with Denver Water taking about 60 percent of its natural flows to supply water to the Front Range. They’ve proposed to take another 15 percent of the river through an expansion of their Moffat Tunnel diversion. For the last 8 years, Trout Unlimited has been working hard to make sure that approval of Denver’s Moffat expansion project only happens if the Fraser River and its tributaries are protected and their degraded condition improved. Recently, TU, Grand County and Denver Water agreed on a long-term package of protections for the Fraser basin. Under the plan, Denver would provide funds and water to help address impacts based on an ongoing monitoring and adaptive management program called "Learning by Doing".

This agreement offers the promise of a healthy Fraser River far into the future. Now we need the Army Corps to lock in these protections by including them as requirements in their federal permit for the Moffat Project.  You can help by clicking here and submitting comments through our online action alert.  It is quick and easy - and your voice will make a difference!

Getting Kids Outdoors

The second ever Outdoor Mentors Festival hosted by Colorado Trout Unlimited took place at Chatfield State Park on May 3rd. Fly fishing, bait fishing, canoeing, rock climbing, nature walk, laser shot, air rifle and archery activities were all available for kids to experience at no cost to participants. These activities were provided by our partners at Colorado Bow Hunters Association, Pheasants Forever, Colorado Trout Unlimited, American Canoe Association, Avid4 Adventure and Colorado Parks & Wildlife. OMpic2In an effort to provide experience in outdoor activities to children who may not have that chance in other settings, the event focused on local mentoring groups. There were over 100 participants from Big Brothers Big Sisters, Denver Kids, Inc., and Denver Sports Buddies, along with other organizations. It was often the case during the May 3rd event that it was a child and mentors first time fishing, shooting, canoeing, or rock climbing. Not only was the event at Chatfield a success in that the children had a great time, the mentors also saw how easy and fun it is to take part in some of the activities. Colorado’s great outdoors, and locations such as Chatfield State Park, are meant to be shared by all. We hope events such as this will get more youth outside and caring about our natural resources.

The Colorado Outdoor Mentors are a coalition of conservation organizations, state agencies, youth development organizations, and other key outdoor recreation stakeholders engaged in a sustainable, coordinated effort to expand opportunities for non-traditional audiences to participate in traditional outdoor recreational activities and learn the importance of preserving our conservation heritage.

Whatever outdoor pursuit interests a child, there are organizations providing an outlet for that activity. The Colorado Outdoor Mentors and CTU hope to make those connections and provide those opportunities. By encouraging mentors to share their enjoyment of the outdoors with a child on a regular basis, we can make a significant impact on that child’s perception of the outdoors.

Check in to the events section of www.coloradotu.org to stay up to date on upcoming youth education events throughout the summer.

***Let’s Fish! Day Camp - July 12th, July 19th, and a night of camping on August 3rd - 4th

Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s Angler Outreach Program and Colorado Trout Unlimited are offering a special youth family fishing program for Denver and the surrounding areas. These fishing clinics are designed to recruit and encourage youth participation in fishing and camping. Fishing activities will build upon the skills learned the previous weekend and include: •    Warm Water and Fly Fishing Techniques •    Wildlife Management and Fish Ecology •    “Leave no trace” Camping in Golden Gate Canyon State Park Apply for the Let's Fish Day Camp here.

***Fall Outdoor Mentors Festival - August 16th at Barr Lake State Park

Contact Garrett Hanks at ghanks@tu.org for more information about Colorado Outdoor Mentors and how to participate in future events.

Time to seal the deal on protecting Hermosa Creek

Hermosa Creek in Southwest Colorado is beautiful in many ways. To anglers, it is trout heaven. To mountain bikers, it is an awesome place to ride. To miners, it is a limited but valuable source of minerals. In some circumstances, these constituencies would fight over the future of this wild piece of U.S. Forest Service land just outside Durango.

But that's not the story that has played out.

No, these interests came together in 2007 and began talking and compromising until they had a plan everybody could live with.

And now they're asking Congress to pass the watershed protection bill that is the result of their work. And it needs to happen soon, before elections become the sole focus of Washington, D.C., and a lame-duck Congress presides.

"All the concessions were made in the community," said Ty Churchwell, a Durango resident who is backcountry coordinator for Trout Unlimited. "There's nothing for them to do in D.C. but vote it forward."

Read the rest of the article in The Denver Post.

11,000 and growing!

It's time to celebrate!  Trout Unlimited now has over 11,000 members in Colorado! We are thrilled to have reached this milestone and see it as a testament to the great work of our Chapters and staff all across our beautiful state.  From the Upper Colorado to the Dolores, the South Platte to the Rio Grande, the Blue and beyond, Trout Unlimited works hard to protect our rivers and fish!

Thank you to all of our members for your continuing support of TU in Colorado!

Vote for TU's Own Rebel Melinda Kassen

Rebel With a Cause is an evening full of celebration, laughter, drinking and honoring conservation heroes, hosted by Conservation Colorado - who Trout Unlimited has worked with on a variety of conservation issues throughout the years. Every year they honor a "Rebel" who has in some way been a hero to the environment. This year they are changing it up a bit and YOU can help choose this year's "Rebel with a Cause". They have selected five different Rebel nominees this year and opened up voting from the public to allow all of us to chose the 2014 honoree. While all of the nominees for the award are truly conservation heroes, we are proud to support one of Trout Unlimited's own Rebels, Melinda Kassen. Melinda has devoted her whole career to becoming a "Water Wonk" (self proclaimed) and has fought some of the biggest fights to protect our streams.  At the Environmental Defense Fund, Melinda served as the legal counsel for the conservation opponents of Two Forks Dam.  After a stint on Congressional committee staff in Washington, DC, Melinda returned to Colorado in 1998, to launch the Colorado Water Project program for Trout Unlimited.  She directed that program until 2010, working to improve stream flows and protect fish habitat. Read more about Melinda here.

Because of all she has done for Trout Unlimited and for Colorado's rivers we hope that you will support Melinda and vote for her to be this years' Rebel With A Cause.

Go to this page to vote: http://conservationco.org/rebelvoting/

 

Patagonia presents DamNation at the Mayan Theater

Please join us on May 14th for the Denver premiere of DamNation at The Mayan Theater.  Produced by 2014 Colorado TU River Steward Award winners, Felt Soul Media, this powerful film odyssey across America explores the sea change in our national attitude from pride in big dams as engineering wonders to the growing awareness that our own future is bound to the life and health of our rivers. Q&A with the filmmakers following the film.

Check DamNationFilm.com for more information.

Purchase tickets: The Mayan Box Office.

The Mayan 110 Broadway Denver, CO 80203 303-744-6799

Matt Clark, Backcountry Coordinator, Western Water Project and SCP

I grew up on a farm and ranch in SW Colorado. From a very young age, playing and working on the land was most of what I did. Growing up outside, and with a family that instilled an appreciation for all of our environment and our duty to work with, not against nature, is one of the big things that led me to conservation work and to TU. I didn’t become immersed in hunting and angling until after college, but when I did, it quickly became my favorite excuse to be outside. Spending days in the wilderness chasing elk and eating brookies for breakfast (catch and release is a great and necessary thing but about half my fishing these days is targeting brook trout in cutthroat waters and enjoying them with bacon and eggs) was the second thing that led me to Trout Unlimited. I represent TU for both the Sportsman’s Conservation Project on land protection, planning, and policy, as well as the Western Water Project implementing on the ground conservation projects with landowners and on public lands in collaboration with our local chapter, the Dolores River Anglers. Working across TU program areas, serving on the board of our chapter since I started with TU six years ago, and having been fortunate enough to work closely with CTU, has given me a deep appreciation of how much our organization, how much we all collectively, are accomplishing for fisheries and watersheds across the state.

Here are some current highlights illustrating what this means in my neck of the woods. In the on the ground category, there is a large cobble push up dam the spans the Dolores River for about 9 months of the year (the other three it’s blown out by spring high flows, after words it’s rebuilt to work as a diversion for the rest of the summer and fall), blocking fish passage both up and down stream because the cobble is so porous water flows through it, not over it. Working closely with the landowner, the NRCS, and the Forest Service (because the diversion happens to be on federal land), we are replacing the push up dam with a series of large rock cross vanes that will provide fish and boat passage and reliable and maintenance free access to the ranch’s water right. A win-win situation for everyone involved.

The policy and protection side has seen us working successfully for stream and riparian area setbacks and No Surface Occupancy stipulations to protect winter elk habitat on the San Juan National Forest and adjacent BLM lands. Currently we are diving into Travel Management Planning in the upper Dolores River watershed. The previously release plan failed to adequately analyze and account for impacts to fish and wildlife and was successfully appealed by a coalition of TU and other conservation organizations. We are now working with the Forest Service to help ensure a good conservation outcome this time around.

The common thread of needing the land and it’s resources both for enjoyment and sanity, as well as survival, was not lost on our forefathers. Leaders such as Teddy Roosevelt and Aldo Leopold helped point the way toward living appropriately on the land and the work that TU and it’s members do day in and out is building on that legacy. I look forward to continuing to work with you on projects and ideas large and small. If you have any questions or thoughts, please get in touch with me.

--- Matt Clark, Backcountry Coordinator, Western Water Project and SCP mclark@tu.org, 970-799-0274

The Rocky Mountain Flyathlon

I have long believed that the best fly fishing spots in Colorado can’t be found by flipping through the majority of guidebooks that you currently have sitting on your shelf.  Nor are they frequently updated in colorful chalk on the big board of flow conditions at your local fly shop.  And they certainly aren’t in locations that most guides choose to venture (at least not with clients). No, to get to my best fly fishing destinations in Colorado, you are going to have to work harder than that.  Because these special places are “back there”.  Way back there.  To get to these waters, you will have to drive on paved roads until you get to dirt roads until those dirt roads narrow and then run out.  Even then, you will still have many miles to go, on foot, often up crushing inclines on trails that may or may not have not been maintained in a while.  And when you finally get there, you will not catch twenty inch brown trout or pig rainbows.  But you will be happy.  Alone, exhausted from the journey and surrounded by the most majestic landscapes that the Centennial State has to offer, you can catch a piece of Colorado’s natural history.  And when you see that signature orange slash along the lower jaw, in an instant, you will know that the effort was worthwhile.  Because this is fly fishing in Colorado.

It is the relentless pursuit of this native high that can only be found within the high mountain lakes and streams contained within Colorado’s many wilderness and roadless areas, and within the remotest of remote reaches of our national parks, that led me to discover what I call the “flyathlon”.  As the father of two young girls, my time away from home is inherently limited, so to be a good dad and still get my cutthroat fix, I pack lightly and carry a seven-piece, three-weight stick.  And I run.  I run so that I can maximize my minimal free time reaching out to these beautiful fish.  I run so that I feel like I earned it.  And then, back at the trailhead at the end of that remote and narrow dirt road, I typically enjoy another of Colorado’s finest, our superior craft beer.

run.  fish.  beer.  Simple as that.

It turns out, while I may be the first one to formally put a name to this Colorado multi-sport experience, I now know that I am not the only flyathlete.  One afternoon several years ago, as I eagerly described the concept to a friend, he quickly cut me off, indicating that this is something that he has done for years.  And the movement has grown quickly from there.

Last August, fifteen brave pioneers dragged themselves out of their tents/beds to make the journey to Monarch Lake in Grand County, Colorado, to compete in the inaugural (yet entirely unofficial) Flyathlon race event.  Many toed the start line having endured wave after wave of soaking rain as they stood around the pre-race campfire the night before, drinking some of Colorado’s finest craft beer. The race day premise was simple. Run around Monarch Lake, catch a fish, and do it as quickly as possible.  The bigger the fish you caught, the more time that was taken off at the end of your run.  Of the 15 race participants, more than half hooked, landed, and documented their catch.  And while some were thwarted by the fishing gods, everyone had a wonderful time.

After that first event, the feedback that I received was amazing.  S othis year, I am taking the event, and the concept, to the next level.  The 1st Annual Rocky Mountain Flyathlon will be held near Saguache, CO, the weekend of August 15th-17th.  The event will be permitted through the U.S. Forest Service, making it “official.”  The course will be approximately 7 miles total length, with opportunities to catch brown, rainbow, brook, and cutthroat trout (bonus time off for the native fish!).  Participants are encouraged to spend the weekend in the San Luis Valley, as camping sites will be provided with the event registration for Friday and Saturday evenings.  The event is sponsored by several fine Colorado breweries, so the post-race celebration will likely be legendary.  So that we can give back, we’ll also include some fundraising to help benefit native trout conservation through Colorado Trout Unlimited.  There will be cool prizes for the top finishers and top fundraisers.  If you are a closet flyathlete, or just want to give something new a try, please consider joining us in Saguache in August.

For more information about the Flyathlon or to participate in the August event, please visit my website at www.flyathlon.com, or send me an email at cutthroat@gmail.com.

--- Andrew Todd

 

Women on the Fly are on the Rise

Across the country Trout Unlimited chapters are actively engaging women into our conservation work. While the sport of fly fishing is mainly dominated by men, most of those men will tell you that when it comes to fly fishing, women are naturals!! There are a variety of opportunities for women to learn about fly fishing and to advance their angling skill throughout Colorado, and Colorado Trout Unlimited is helping to build the conservation knowledge of women as well. By becoming a Colorado member of Trout Unlimited, you receive the award-winning magazine Trout, stickers, the High Country Angler publication, calendars and discounts for various merchandise; but most importantly you are a small piece of the largest effort in the country to keep the cold water fisheries healthy! That is amazing!!

In the fall of 2012, Trout Unlimited launched a campaign aimed at getting more women to sign up as members. In doing so, women were offered complimentary trial memberships over the course of the year. Over 2,500 women signed up! What a great success. Thanks to all of you who reached out to women in your community and invited them to join Trout Unlimited.  It is undoubtedly because of your efforts that we can boast a 13 percent retention rate so far on these trial members.

To help bring women into our river conservation world, we are pleased to bring back this complementary trial membership and to announce that women can sign up for their first time annual membership for FREE right now!! In addition, women can renew for half price, at a special $17.50 rate. To add a little incentive for our chapters, any recruiting chapters (for women membership renewals) will receive $15 of that $17.50 in the form of a special rebate. AND, for even more incentive from March 1 - May 31, Trout Unlimited will be tracking which chapters recruit the most women and which have the highest rates of renewals (allocated proportionally based on chapter size.) The chapter that recruits the most women will be issued a plaque. Cash rewards will be awarded to the chapters that have the highest rates of renewals: $500 for first place, $300 for second place, and $100 for third place.

Colorado Trout Unlimited has partnered with a lot of groups across the state who are engaging women like Colorado Women Flyfishers and the Fly Gals from Collegiate Peaks Anglers. We have also created a “meet up” type page on Facebook where women throughout Colorado can find other ladies to fish with and to share their fishing stories. You can join that page at: https://www.facebook.com/groups/cowomenonthefly/.

To learn more about these efforts or to get involved, please contact Stephanie Scott at sscott@tu.org.