The CURRENT Podcast | Episode 5 featuring CTU's Trout in the Classroom

The-Current-Episode-5.jpg

The CURRENT is a low-key, light-hearted fly fishing podcast hosted by Will Rice. With some recently found free time, Will will be thumbing through his Rolodex of accomplished anglers and friends in the fly fishing industry to talk about what's going on in their neck of the woods.

After visiting with friends from a variety of fisheries across the US, host Will Rice welcomes Bianca McGrath-Martinez from CTU, Bill Gilmore and Guy Grace from Littleton Public Schools to talk about the Trout in the Classroom program.

This environmental education program allows for elementary, middle, and high school students to raise rainbow trout eggs to fry as a vehicle to understand ecosystems. At the end of the program, the students typically release the fry into a local fishery with help from CPW. Will explores the fate of these trout with the recent shutdown of schools.

For more on the CTU Trout In The Classroom Program: CLICK HERE

You can find the podcast on Apple MusicSpotify & Stitcher. If you enjoy what Will is putting together with The CURRENT podcast, we ask that you please rate it and leave it a review on Apple Podcasts & Spotify! Thanks for listening!

Help support our local partners that support the rivers and fishing you love!

Distance makes us.jpg

As we practice our social distancing and comply with stay-at-home orders, we recognize that our commitment to those within our communities is more important than ever. We value the members, supporters, and partners of the TU in Colorado family, and we cannot overstate our gratitude for our fellow Coloradoans who are providing essential services during the pandemic. From healthcare workers on the front lines of the crisis to those working to keep our communities safe, the stores stocked and open, provide distance learning opportunities for our children, and so many others – Thank You!

Unfortunately, at the same time many businesses have had to shut their doors, lay off employees, and move to online-only sales. At Colorado TU we are fortunate to have many incredible business partners who direct some of their earnings to our work in support of coldwater conservation across the state. During this difficult time, and if you are able, we ask that you consider supporting the businesses that support Colorado TU by shopping via their online stores or buying a gift certificate for future use. We have highlighted a handful of our business partners here and will continue to share ways you can show your support to many of our partners across the state over the coming weeks.

We recognize that there are fly shops, restaurants, and other businesses in your local communities that support the work TU does and could use your support as well. If you would prefer to direct your support locally, please consider shopping via their online store or buying a gift certificate for future use. You can see a map of the many local shops and outfitters who support Colorado TU here.

We are all in this together and we thank you in advance for supporting the businesses who support our work conserving, protecting, and restoring Colorado’s watershed and wild places.

The Colorado TU Team


Click on the logo below to see how to support:


River Surveys - help inform local management efforts

GWMP Angler Survey Ad 1.jpg

Colorado TU has partnered with local chapters and river conservancy districts to host angler surveys that will help inform local management efforts. If you fish or recreate on any of the rivers below, please take a second to fill out the survey below!

UPPER GUNNISON RIVER

Angler survey will inform ongoing stream management plan for Gunnison River, Taylor River, Tomichi Creek drainage, and Cebolla Creek drainage.


BLUE RIVER

Angler survey will inform ongoing stream management plan for the Blue River and major tributaries.

Fishing – and Keeping It Local – Through the Pandemic

matthew-mcbrayer-GcGz0yYy3bg-unsplash.jpg

These are difficult times. COVID-19 has millions under stay-at-home orders, isolating themselves, practicing social distancing and limiting their personal contact with others. In communities across the US and around the world, we’re all experiencing it.

Fortunately, the Colorado stay-at-home order recognizes that one of our allowed “necessary activities” is outdoor recreation, specifically allowing “outdoor activity, such as, by way of example and without limitation, walking, hiking, nordic skiing, snowshoeing, biking or running.”

Time spent on the water is allowed under the state order and can be a much-needed way of healing our spirits. Our friends at Angling Trade have a great overview on their blog on fishing during the pandemic– but the essentials really come down to common sense. Fish near where you live, on your “home waters” rather than trying to travel longer distances where you could pick up or spread the virus in another community. Always practice social distancing while going to the water and when fishing.  Don’t put yourself or others at risk – we will have plenty of chances to fish in groups and at more distant destinations down the road.

While face-to-face gatherings with angling friends – including our TU chapter and council meetings – are on hold for the indefinite future, there are also plenty of “virtual” opportunities to engage with TU and the broader angling community as well – and we’ve included links to several of these in the next issue of Currents. It may not be on the water, but still is an important way to connect with others who share our passion for rivers, trout, and conservation.

All of our Colorado fishing experiences are immeasurably enriched by our fly shop and outfitter partners. The pandemic hasn’t changed how important they are as key parts of our community economies, as reliable sources of information, and as allies and supporters of coldwater conservation. That makes it more important than ever that we also show them our appreciation by continuing to do business with them through these challenging times.  

While traditional brick-and-mortar storefronts may be closed, you can still order your gear, flies, and tying materials from your local fly shop online. Or think ahead and book a guide trip for later in the year. Or purchase a gift card for yourself or as a gift for others. Every purchase you make will help the local businesses we rely on for leadership and reliable information on our Colorado waterways so that they weather this crisis and be there to continuing serving us on the other side of the pandemic.

Check out the map of local fishing businesses across the state who have supported Colorado TU’s mission, including links to their online storefronts!

Check out the new Spring 2020 issue of High Country Angler e-zine

thumbnail_HCA Spring 20 Cover.jpg

Featuring an article on fishing Trappers Lake, a report on an important legislative victory for instream flows, Spring fishing tips with Landon Mayer, photos and the story from the annual Frostbite Fish-off in Pueblo, and the regular columns:

  • TWISTED DAMSEL by Joel Evans

  • POOLS AND RAPIDS: A FISH STORY by Hayden Mellsop

  • 4 KEYS TO BECOMING A DEADLY FLATS FLY FISHER by Peter Stitcher

  • THE LAST CAST by Dr. John Nickum.



HCASpring2020.jpg
screenshot-issuu.com-2020.03.24-15_54_13.png


High Country Angler is published 4 times a year by High Country Publications, LLC., in cooperation with Colorado Trout Unlimited. HCA is there to keep you up-to-date with all the latest news and advice from some of the high country’s most skilled and knowledgeable fly fishers. The articles are written by anglers, for anglers, about high country fishing!

Caring for kids at home? Water Education Resources for Kids!

Check out these resources for online learning! A big thank you to Water Education Colorado for sharing this list of activities for kids, parents, and educators to help continue water education during this time when many are staying home, telecommuting, or just trying to keep engaged.

DiscoverWater.org: Turn screen time into learning time with FREE online games for kids in grades 3-6. This includes "Soap and Water Science."

Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH): Download FREE resources to teach about handwashing and more! Click here.

Project WET is keeping an updated list of all of its Home and Telecommuting resources here. And so much more!

Salmon School - Wild Salmon Center

TU's response to COVID-19

Practicing "social distancing" on the Potomac. All photos by Chris Wood.

Practicing "social distancing" on the Potomac.
All photos by Chris Wood.

A note from Chris Wood, President and Chief Executive Officer of Trout Unlimited:

We are all adapting to the new realities of the COVID-19 virus. Because of our concern for the health and well-being of our employees, we are closing all of TU’s offices and have requested all TU staff to work from home. We have also canceled all travel.

We are in a very fluid situation, and new information is rapidly emerging. Yesterday, the White House urged that we all avoid social gatherings in groups of 10 or more people.

 

Here is what the guidance from the Centers for Disease Control says: 

“Older adults and people who have severe underlying chronic medical conditions like heart or lung disease or diabetes seem to be at a higher risk for developing more serious complications from COVID-19 illness. People who are at higher risk are encouraged to avoid crowds as much as possible.”

For that reason, all in-person and indoor Trout Unlimited events and gatherings, including chapter meetings, are cancelled for the next 30 days. We will assess where we stand in 30 days and have further guidance at that point. Small group outings may proceed with all of the proper precautions taken about social distancing.

COVID-19 has everyone on edge. Please be safe and be careful, but also enjoy the time with family and friends, and the people you love. Know that we will get through this together, and we will continue the good work of protecting and restoring the places we live, love, and fish.

Please help us spread the word by sharing these messages from our blog and YouTube channel with your members and partners.

8 female pioneers of the outdoors and environment

Many stories go untold and some of these you might not have heard about. Learn about 8 women who changed the narrative by advocating for conservation and the protection of their land, water, and wildlife.

Many stories go untold and some of these you might not have heard about. Learn about 8 women who changed the narrative by advocating for conservation and the protection of their land, water, and wildlife.

Mary Seacole – Travel Memoirist

Mary_Seacole_Drawing.jpg

Mary Seacole, aka Mother Seacole was a novelist and avid traveler in the late 1800s. Born in Jamaica, she took to travelling through the Bahamas, Haiti, England, and Cuba. She collected knowledge about local plants used for herbal medicines. She later wrote the book ‘Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands”, the first travel memoir ever published by a black woman.


 

Clare Marie Hodges – National Park Service ranger

clare-hodges-horse-web_1.jpg

Formerly a schoolteacher, Clare changed career paths at the end of WWI and became the first female National Park Service Ranger. She was known to be fearless and independent, seen riding horseback overnight from each ends of the park to deliver gate receipts. She was the only female park ranger for the next 30 years.


 

Harriet Chalmers Adams – National Geographic Society

Harriet was a world explorer who was driven by curiosity and a goal to write about the world around her. Her love for travel began after a trip to Mexico. From then on, she explored all South America, with a focus on getting off the beaten path and meeting with 20 indigenous tribes. She was not only a strong writer, but she was a photographer who would contribute up to 30 articles for the National Geographic Society. Even though she was a key contributor to the publication, she was never offered a membership as she was a woman. She didn’t let that deter her and helped create the Society of Women Geographers in 1925.  

800px-ADAMS,_MRS._FRANKLIN,_NEE_HARRIET_CHALMERS._AT_ZOO_WITH_LLAMA_LCCN2016863766.jpg
 “I’ve never found my sex a hinderment; never faced a difficulty, which a woman, as well as a man, could not surmount; never felt a fear of danger; never lacked courage to protect myself. I’ve been in tight places and have seen harrowing thing.”
— Harriet Chalmers Adams
 

Josephine Mandamin – First Nations Anishinaabe Elder and Water Walker

josephine-best-picture.jpg

Josephine was a water activist who called for a need to protect and care for our water. Since 2003, she had completed 13 Water Walks around Lake Superior, whose shoreline is over 2,500 miles, and would ceremoniously carry a copper pail filled with water that contained the lake water to raise awareness and pray. Others began to hear about her Water Walks and began joining her on her protest. Her final walk started in April 2017 and there were over a thousand participants. She and a group of helpers known as The Walkers started in Minnesota and for 97 days, they traveled 3,197 miles on foot. The path they took covered the shorelines of Lake Superior, Lake Huron, Lake Erie, and so on until they reached the Labrador Sea and North Atlantic Ocean. Josephine passed away on February 22nd, 2019, at the age of 77, but she encouraged future generations to pick up the copper pail and continue sharing awareness for clean water.

 

Hallie M. Daggett - first woman employed by the US Forest Service

stelprdb5414091.gif

Hallie Daggett learned how to hunt, fish, ride, trap and shoot early in life, skills which served her well as the first woman employed by the Forest Service. She worked as a lookout for 15 years beginning in 1913 at Eddy's Gulch Lookout Station atop Klamath Peak in California’s Klamath National Forest. It was almost a hundred years later before the Forest Service appointed their first female chief Abigail R. Kimbell in 2007.

 

Berta Isabel Cáceres Flores – Hondouran human rights and environmental activist

424px-Berta_Cáceres_(cropped).jpg

Berta fought for her people, land, water when her government and outside corporations began building what would have been the world’s largest dam in Honduras, without the approval of the people who lived there. The project was ultimately halted by peaceful protests, local assemblies, the blocking of roads to the construction site, and citations of human rights violations by the international community. Berta was outspoken and supported by her local community but was killed by those who wished to stop the Honduran activists protesting the dam. Her legacy and impact continue today. The people of Honduras are still fighting off the project and calling for justice in Berta’s name.

 

Wangari Maathai - 2004 Nobel Peace Prize Winner

Wangari_Maathai_social_forum.jpg

Professor Maathai founded The Green Belt Movement (GBM) in 1977 in response to the needs of rural Kenyan women who reported that their streams were drying up, their food supply was less secure, and they had to walk further and further to get firewood for fuel and fencing. Together, the GBM encouraged women o grow seedlings and plant trees to bind the soil, store rainwater, provide food and firewood, and receive a small monetary token for their work. The Green Belt Movement continues to expand its horizon to include community development work encompassing the arenas of environmental conservation, democracy, community empowerment and conflict resolution.

Mollie H. Beattie - first female director of U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Mollie_Beattie.jpg

Mollie Beattie was the first female director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. In her short term there from 1993 to 1996, she oversaw the reintroduction of the gray wolf into the northern Rocky Mountains and the addition of 15 national wildlife refuges. A wilderness area is named for her in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

In the long term, the economy and the environment are the same thing. If it’s unenvironmental it is uneconomical. That is the rule of nature.
— Mollie H. Beattie

March Currents: A voice for Colorado's rivers

Copy of CURRENTS.jpg
screenshot-coloradotu.salsalabs.org-2020.03.10-14_05_48.png

Topics include:

  • 8 female pioneers of the outdoors and environment

  • 10 National Parks that wouldn’t exist without women

  • Advocacy Alert Digest

  • Drag-free presentations

  • Water for Colorado

  • Film: Project Rainbow

  • STREAM Girls volunteers needed

  • F3T showings across Colorado

  • Raffles

  • Brewing for Colorado’s Rivers

  • Gala 2020 Recap