Celebrating Bud Isaacs, and Reconnecting the Colorado

Bud Isaacs, a longtime advocate for the Upper Colorado River and past recipient of the Silver Trout Award passed away last month. The Colorado TU family will miss Bud, but his legacy will live on through the Colorado River Connectivity Channel that he helped champion for many years. CTU Past President Tony Kay shared this statement at Bud’s memorial service.

 To my Dear Friend Bud,

Kaye asked me to explain the reference made to UCRA in the memorial notice and obituary and why it was so important to Bud. 

Bud and I shared a lot of interests. Hunting, fishing, tennis, to name a few, but above all, we shared a passion for preserving and restoring a small piece of the Colorado River.

Before I unravel UCRA for you I would like to talk about Bud, Bud the boy, and Bud the man we all came to know and love. Bud was a naturalist in the truest sense of the word. He loved the natural world and everything in it, all its inhabitants, bugs, birds, animals, plants and all the other wonders of nature. Growing up in Sumatra, Indonesia he knew jungles and the wonders they hid. Getting to interact with a baby tiger as a boy, may have been the spark that lit his fierce devotion to nature. He loved the outdoors. He was truly a man for all seasons.

 A consummate fly fisher, hunter, skier. Upland bird hunter with his beloved dogs, Pebbles and Riva. Everything about nature captivated him, whether he was fishing the Amazon, Iceland, Alaska, Mexico, Christmas Island or Chile. Africa was a favorite of his not to mention he and Kaye’s beautiful garden. Above all Bud cared about Colorado, his backyard and felt it was something he could do something about and he did.   

UCRA is the acronym for the Upper Colorado River Alliance. I am going to give you a little history on how it came to be. 

In 1998, Bud contacted me as he knew I was in my ex officio role as President of Colorado Trout Unlimited and was working hard to try to mitigate what was turning into an environmental disaster on the Upper Colorado River. We were losing all of the Colorado rainbow trout, due to the impact of whirling disease precipitated by a small dam just below Granby called Windy Gap.

Bud recognized the problem early on and we joined forces to help deal with it. Together we set up meetings between the relevant authorities and the Northern Colorado Water Conservancy District, who owned Windy Gap, to see what if anything they were willing to do to mitigate the problem.

Just to illustrate how long this process took, the proposed solution, which was to take Windy Gap offline and re-connect the river, was begun 24 years ago . We had willing participants and in early 1999 had our first engineering drawings to re-connect the river completed.   By the summer of 2001 we had made a lot of progress and just prior to an Intergovernmental Agency agreement being signed by all parties,  9/11 happened which among things put the project on hold.

Around 2010, Bud got wind of changes that the water buffaloes wanted to make, relative to their water rights on the Colorado River.  He sprang into action and hired the finest water lawyers to represent us. New research that he managed to obtain showed the river to be in far worse shape than we originally thought. The section of river below Windy Gap had lost 6 species of Mayfly and their prized Stoneflies in the short space of 20 years, and Windy Gap reservoir was to blame.

We began the hard fought battle of legal and public pressure to push our proposal to take Windy Gap offline and re-connect the river.  We began looking for allies.  Trout Unlimited National Office decided we needed help and assigned their resident legal expert to aid in our cause. Grand County, Colorado Parks and Wildlife and the Colorado River Headwaters Chapter of Trout Unlimited pitched in to help. In further meetings with all the parties involved, they soon learned that Bud was willing to do whatever it took and if need be, would fund it himself. Bud was a formidable adversary and with him leading the charge, a new agreement began to take shape.

In early 2011 we decided to form UCRA as a 501C3  non-profit corporation, dedicated to preserving and protecting the Upper Colorado River. We knew we would need help from our partners in the drainage and elsewhere and wanted to provide a mechanism whereby we could share the financial burden of the awesome task we had undertaken. Bud along with well-known author Steve Grace decided to write a book about Bud and the struggle to preserve the river for future generations titled “Oil and Water”, the proceeds from the book go directly to UCRA.  

Bud’s last project was to film a documentary about the struggle to re-connect the river and documentary film maker Nickolas Barris is currently working on completing this.

The day Bud died was the same day all the stakeholders were meeting in Granby. The Project was now in the hands of the Natural Resources Conservation Service, a subset of USDA, and well on its way to completion. Bud was going to attend the meeting via Zoom as he and Kaye were in Florida. I was driving up Berthoud Pass on my way to the meeting, when Kaye called to give me the bad news. To break the news gently to me she said, Bud won’t be able to attend the meeting tonight, but he will be there in spirit. This was the final public comment meeting for those in support or against the project. There were no dissenters, Bud knew that we had succeeded and that what he had fought for so long and hard was soon going to become a reality

As always there are many folks who have been involved in this project and I know Bud would have wanted to thank all of you who helped get us to this point. You all know who you are.

In the future as you take the drive over Berthoud Pass, down  through Winter Park and the Fraser Valley, just past  Granby, you will see just over a mile of beautiful new river with public access that wasn’t there previously, adjacent to a much smaller Windy Gap reservoir. Stoneflies the size of swallows will be bouncing off your windshield and you will remember that Bud Isaacs made that possible and you will say:

Thank you Bud!

  - Tony Kay

Gala 2022: Live Auction package details & more!

It’s Gala week!

Preview of Live Auction items & more below

Bidding already open for 100 items! ; register to bid on silent, live, raffles etc: REGISTER NOW

New this year: $20 per raffle ticket for custom Sarabella Fly Rod, $100 per ticket for grand prize stay at Madison Valley Ranch in Montana (max 100 tix being sold), and if you purchase a $75 admisson ticket, you are automatically admitted to our in-person Summer event at Coors Field in Denver!

-Bidding for LIVE AUCTION is now open! Auctioneer Jim Berz will introduce and auction off these premier items at 7:00 PM during our virtual gala on Thursday. Upon registering HERE you will receive the zoom link for the virtual program.

-LIVE AUCTION ITEM PREVIEW (bidding is open now, closes during live auction program Thursday):

1) Fish in Colorado with Pat Dorsey - Enjoy a full day of guided walk/wade fishing for 2 with one of Colorado's most respected guides. You'll join Pat and spend the day fishing on Colorado’s South Platte in Cheesman Canyon! Don't miss this opportunity to fish CO waters with one of the greats. Valid for 2022; subject to availability. Donated by Blue Quill Anglers. Website: www.bluequillanglers.com

2) Suite for Rockies Game at Coors Field - Play Ball! Watch the Rockies in the Molson Coors corporate suite at Coors Field. Winner's choice from these available 2022 games:

Sunday, June 19th, at 1:10 PM: Rockies vs. Padres

Saturday, July 13th, at 6:40 PM: Rockies vs. Padres

Friday, August 12th, at 6:40 PM: Rockies vs. Diamondbacks

Deluxe suite holds 12 people and includes food and Molson Coors beers! Additional tickets can be purchased if needed. Available game dates may be limited. Auction buyer should contact Molson Coors as soon as possible after the auction to choose from available games. The longer one waits, the fewer games are available. Valid for the 2022 season. Donated by Molson Coors. https://www.molsoncoors.com

3) Fish & Luxurious Stay in CO! – Spend 2 fabulous days at the upscale glamping resort Bison Peaks Lodge near the Tarryall River at Lake George, Colorado! This trip includes lodging and fishing for 2 anglers in South Park with a dedicated guide from Tumbling Trout Fly Shop. Revel in the stunning panoramic views of the serene Puma Hills and Tarryall Mountains through floor to ceiling windows at the lodge! Donated by Bison Peaks Lodge and Tumbling Trout Fly Shop. Donated by Bison Peaks Lodge and Tumbling Trout Fly Shop. https://pumahills.com/portfolio-item/bison-peak-lodge/ and https://www.tumblingtrout.com/

4) Return to Oz - a trip down under to Tasmania, Australia!

Home to the 2019 World Fly Fishing Championships, Tasmania Australia was written up in TROUT Magazine by editor Kirk Deeter as one of the best trips he has ever experienced. To quote Kirk, "On a scale of 10, this was a 15." You and a guest can 'return to Oz' where trout fishing began in the Southern Hemisphere. This package will include six days of fishing traveling across different waters in Tasmania, and two days in the historic State Capital of Hobart including a private tour of Parliament House with the Honorable Minister Guy Barnett.

You'll enjoy experiences available nowhere other than through this special package: two of your six fishing days will be with Malcolm Crosse, the icon of Australian fly fishing (akin to Lee Wulff in the US), staying at his rustic cabin on the shores of Penstock Lagoon in the Central Highlands. In addition to your guided fishing, you'll have the chance to tour the historic Hobart area with two nights lodging at the Customs House Hotel on the Hobart Harbor, plus a tour of Parliament House and archives with the Honorable Guy Barnett MP, Tasmanian Minster for Primary Industries and Water, Energy, and Resources, including dinner in Parliament House as his guests. Then visit the Salmon Ponds historic site where over two decades the Tasmanian efforts in the late 1800s resulted in the first Brown trout spawning in the Southern Hemisphere. Travel on to the first hydroelectric facility built in Tasmania in 1922 which is an Australian National Historic Site.

Expires 3/31/2024, dates to be coordinated and subject to availability.

Details on the guided fishing:

Trout Guides and Lodges Tasmania is the State body representing professional guides and fishing accommodation providers in Tasmania. Trout Guides and Lodges will provide two days of guided fly fishing and two days of local accommodation to the prize winner. The fly fishing experience will comprise one day lake fishing in the Central Highlands of Tasmania and one day on one of Tasmania's rivers either in the Midlands or the North of Tasmania. The accommodation will be provided to complement the fishing itinerary. Each day of fly fishing will be conducted by a professional guide who is a member of TGALT and will include all gear and be fully catered.

RiverFly Guided Fly Fishing with owner and international award-winning guide Daniel Hackett will also provide two days of guided fly fishing for two anglers. His service is based out of the Launceston, which is a UNESCO City of Gastronomy with great restaurants to go along with the fly fishing. Lodging at a top notch hotel included.

Return to Oz!
https://www.troutguidestasmania.com.au/
www.riverfly.com.au
https://www.parliament.tas.gov.au/
https://www.customshousehotel.com/
https://salmonponds.com.au/
https://www.ifs.tas.gov.au/news/2019/jul/03/penstock-lagoon
https://www.hydro.com.au/things-to-do/waddamana-heritage-site
https://www.tu.org/magazine/video-spotlight/video-spotlight-australia-tasmania-fly-fishing-trailer/
https://issuu.com/anglingtrade/docs/issue-40-final-low-res/6

5) Exclusive Private Water Fishing for 4- Four anglers will enjoy a day of guided fishing on winner's choice of two exclusive North Fork South Platte trophy trout waters: Shawnee Meadows near Shawnee, or Rawhide Flyfishers near Bailey. These properties are carefully managed to provide an outstanding angling experience for large trout, and have undergone extensive habitat restoration with Freestone Aquatics to provide improved holding habitat for fish as well as for spawning and bug life. You and your guests will have a day to remember! Dates subject to availability. Donated by Freestone Aquatics, RareWaters, and Confluence Land Company

6) Experience the Incredible Fishing on the Gunny Gorge - The winner and a guest will enjoy a two-day guided float trip down the Gunnison Gorge with Black Canyon Anglers. The trip includes lodging and dinner the night prior to the launch. On the float all meals are taken care of, and if rental equipment is needed, it will be provided. This wilderness adventure features unrivaled scenery and geology, with sightings of big horn sheep, mule deer, river otters, eagles and most importantly, unparalleled fly fishing for “Trophy” rainbow and brown trout! Subject to availability; gratuity not included. Donated by Black Canyon Anglers. www.blackcanyonanglers.com

7) Casa De Campo Trip of a Lifetime - The Argentinian fishing trip you've been waiting for! Enjoy 7 nights and 6 days for two near Alumine, Argentina! Casa De Campo Lodge is located two hours north of Junín de los Andes, an area known for some of the most prolific dry fly fishing in the world. These waters, especially the spring creeks, provide great sight fishing opportunities for trophy-size brook, brown and rainbow trout. Your hosts will delight you with their traditional homemade Argentine meals. Outdoor porches and sitting areas give guests the opportunity to enjoy the sunset hours with a drink & hors d' oeuvres after the day's adventures. Lodging, meals, beer and wine, transportation between airport and lodges, fishing license and gear included. Don't miss out on your chance to experience an Argentina fly fishing adventure! Expires May 15, 2024; subject to availability. Air not included. Donated by Set Fly Fishing. www.setflyfishing.com

8) Beach Getaway to Hawaii - Toss your cares to the wind for an incredible vacation in a hot destination! Enjoy a 5-night stay for up to four at the Outrigger Waikiki Beach Resort. Enjoy the comforts of a cozy sitting area with inviting decor and ample space to accommodate up to four guests in your room, which includes a balcony. Stay steps away from the sand and sun of the famed Waikiki Beach in inviting accommodations with premium amenities. Guests are just moments from the most iconic island attractions and activities Oahu has to offer! Donated by Winspire. https://www.outrigger.com/hotels-resorts/hawaii/oahu/outrigger-waikiki-beach-resort

Support Restoring and Reconnecting the Upper Colorado River!

The Windy Gap Reservoir was placed on the mainstem of the Upper Colorado River in 1984, blocking the passage of fish and aquatic insects, reducing water quality and habitat, and blocking natural river maintenance processes. Now, Trout Unlimited is working with Grand County and Northern Water to reconnect the Colorado at Windy Gap and create positive changes to the river’s health and the entire ecosystem. These efforts will improve downstream fisheries, enhance riparian condition, and create a new mile of public fishing access on the re-establshed river channel.

The Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) has issued a Draft Plan and Environmental Assessment for the project and is accepting public comment through March 10. If the project is approved, work can begin this May and be completed by November 2023.

You can support restoration and reconnection of the Colorado River at Windy Gap by submitting supportive comments to the NRCS through our simple online action center.

Restoring Fish Passage at Canyon Creek

Canyon Creek flows from the Flat Tops and is a spawning tributary to the Colorado River located near New Castle - but much more of the stream could be available to fish coming up from the Colorado were it not for an existing box culvert structure under Interstate 70 that restricts fish passage into 10+ additional miles of available upstream habitat.

Now, spawning fish will have the chance to return to Canyon Creek thanks to a collaborative project developed by TU with in-kind assistance from Wright Water Engineers (WWE). Using a design for baffles and hemispheres to be placed along the floor of the culvert, the newly installed structures provide velocity shelters for spring-spawning fish making their way upstream at higher flows, and increase depth for those fall spawners moving upstream during lower flows.

This collaborative project was made possible thanks to technical and logistical assistance from Colorado Parks and Wildlife and the Colorado Department of Transportation, and generous financial support from the Colorado Water Conservation Board, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Colorado River Water Conservancy District, Trout and Salmon Foundation, and Trout Unlimited donors including the Eagle Valley Chapter.

Check out this video showing the project from pre-construction through design and to post-construction conditions, produced by our partners at WWE.

Youth Camp Applications Open!

Colorado Trout Unlimited will host the 17th annual River Conservation and Fly Fishing Camp for teen youth at AEI Base Camp in Taylor Park, Colorado, June 12-18, 2022. Since 2006, youth from across the state and beyond have gathered to complete a week-long program of STEM-based conservation education and instruction in the art of fly fishing. Youth 14-18 are eligible to apply for camp, chapters statewide provide scholarships to campers in need. In parallel with Orvis, we are working to achieve 50/50 gender diversity at camp.

This camp provides an unique immersive experience for teens interested in the outdoors, fly fishing, and potential conservation-related career paths. Campers participate in hands-on conservation activities and receive one-on-one and group instruction in the art of fly fishing. Their experience is enriched as they make lifelong relationships, "finding their people" and bonding with peers of similar interests. The program exposes campers to the complexity of water management in the west and its nexus with recreation. The diversity of the conservation program is designed so that participants can envision multiple education and career paths that align with their personal passion for the outdoors.

This summer, 22 upcoming youth leaders will come together to camp, fish, and explore. They will create a memory that will impact their lives for the decades to come. The words of Sam Goldstein, 2010 Alumni, encapsulate his experience: The opportunity to attend Trout Unlimited’s Fly Fishing Youth Camp came when I was at a crossroads in my life. I had been making poor choices as a young man and a very dear friend of mine took me fly fishing, presumably so the rivers might help straighten me out. As a result of his tutelage and kindness, I was awarded a spot in the upcoming Trout Unlimited Youth Camp. Being delighted to partake in the retreat, I soon learned many lessons that would stick with me through my years of fishing and adulthood alike. I have very fond memories of everything from learning different casting methods, tying basic fly patterns, and the joy that comes from showing off your catch! I will always be grateful for experiencing the fly fishing community through the Youth Camp the way I did. The biggest takeaway for me will always be learning how to take care of our rivers whilethey in turn, take care of us.

For more information or to apply for the 2022 River Conservation and Fly Fishing Camp, or if you are an adult and interested in volunteering with the camp, please visit our Youth Camp page here. Applications are due by April 10, 2022.

New Senate legislation to boost abandoned mine cleanups

Last Thursday (February 3, 2022), a bipartisan bill that would help address the chronic problem of pollution leaking from abandoned hardrock mines was introduced in the U.S. Senate. Lead bill sponsors Senator Martin Heinrich (D-NM) and Senator James Risch (R-ID) were joined by Colorado’s senior Senator Michael Bennet (D) as an original cosponsor, as well as Senators Ben Ray Luján (D-NM), Steve Daines (R-MT), Jon Tester (D-MT), Mike Crapo (R-ID), and John Barrasso (R-WY). 

The Good Samaritan Remediation of Abandoned Hardrock Mines Act of 2022 would help address an estimated 500,000 abandoned mines - mines with no one remaining that is responsible for clean-up – 33,000 of which are known to be causing environmental damage. More than 110,000 miles of streams are listed as impaired for heavy metals and/or acidity, and abandoned mines are a major source of these impairments due to acid-mine drainage with toxic metals, such as mercury, lead and arsenic.  

“Abandoned mines represent the least addressed and greatest threat to water quality in the nation,” said Chris Wood, President and CEO of Trout Unlimited. “There is no constituency for abandoned mines and orange water, and we’re excited for Congress to take bipartisan action that will allow organizations such as TU to help protect our communities and clean our rivers and streams.”  

Under current law, Good Samaritan parties can and do voluntarily undertake projects to clean up “non-point-source” abandoned mine pollution, such as moving contaminated waste rock piles away from streams. However, under the Clean Water Act, groups wanting to take on “point-source” mine cleanups—where toxic drainage is discharging directly from the mine opening —face daunting obstacles, including complicated permitting and long-term legal and financial liability for any remaining mine pollution.

The Good Samaritan cleanup bill would establish a pilot program for a permitting process administered by the Environmental Protection Agency that would enable qualified nonprofit groups and other third parties to tackle cleanups of abandoned mine sites, in part by providing targeted, limited liability protection for these so-called “Good Samaritan” groups. State and federal governments have spent billions cleaning up leaking abandoned mines where current law allows, but there is much more work to do. Good Samaritan legislation would help get a handle on the problem by providing an alternative to relying solely on federal Superfund cleanups, which suffer from a lack of funding and capacity. Additionally, Superfund is not well-suited to address the tens of thousands of isolated, smaller mines that would not likely qualify as Superfund sites.      

The challenge of abandoned mines is very significant for Colorado. After the Gold King mine spill in 2015 that impacted the Animas River, numerous Federal and State agencies placed a greater emphasis on quantifying the scope and scale of draining mines in Colorado. A study by the State Division of Reclamation Mining and Safety showed over 250 draining mines in Colorado with 148 likely degrading downstream water quality.

“From the San Juans to the Mosquito range, Colorado’s mountains are dotted with abandoned mines that pollute many of our headwater streams,” said David Nickum, Executive Director of Colorado TU. “Under current law, watershed stewards who could help solve the problem instead would face long-term liability for problems that they had nothing to do with creating. We are grateful to Senator Bennet, and to lead sponsors Senator Heinrich and Senator Risch, for bringing forward common-sense, bipartisan legislation to empower Good Sams to start the important work of cleaning up these abandoned draining mines.”

Newly introduced federal legislation can help Good Samaritans tackle the pollution caused by abandoned mines in Colorado and throughout the West.

Coming Soon: A Home for Greenbacks in the Poudre Headwaters

This first major construction work for the Poudre Headwaters Restoration Project was largely completed just before the end of 2021. Contractor L4 Construction installed a fish barrier at the terminus of the Grand Ditch by La Poudre Pass. The barrier will isolate the planned Greenback cutthroat trout recovery area in upper La Poudre Pass Creek and Long Draw Reservoir from western slope waters intercepted by the Grand Ditch.

The Poudre Headwaters Restoration Project is an ambitious multi-year effort to create a stronghold for Greenback cutthroat trout in the headwaters of the Cache la Poudre River on the Arapaho-Roosevelt National Forests and Rocky Mountain National Park. The project includes establishing permanent barriers to safeguard the native trout recovery waters from invasion by non-native species, as well as temporary barriers to help break up the nearly 40-mile total project into smaller manageable pieces for reclamation and reintroduction of greenbacks. With completion of the Grand Ditch barrier, the first phases of fish reclamation to remove existing non-native fish can proceed in 2022-23 in collaboration with Colorado Parks and Wildlife, and then stocking of Greenback cutthroat trout can proceed in a first section of recovery habitat that will include Long Draw Reservoir and Neota Creek.

Installation of the Grand Ditch barrier created some real challenges as winter weather began to set in at the project site over 10,000 feet in elevation. L4 crews had excavated the area for the barrier installation to specifications from US Forest Service engineers who designed the barrier. Pouring the concrete for the barrier - in a series of three different pours for different portions of the structure - required both keeping the work area dry by blocking inflow above the site and pumping water, and maintaining temperatures for the concrete to cure properly by building a large tent over the site and using large heating units to blow warm air into the tent. Plowing snow to keep road access to the site safe for work crews and trucks delivering the concrete was another challenge.

Work on the concrete barrier was ultimately completed in the final week of December. Additional channel work is planned in 2022, and efforts will also begin on other aspects of the larger Poudre Headwaters Restoration Project. In addition to the Forest Service, Rocky Mountain National Park, and L4, key partners and funders for the barrier installation included Water Supply and Storage Company’s Long Draw Reservoir Mitigation Trust (providing mitigation funding for impacts of their reservoir), the Colorado Water Conservation Board, and the Bass Pro Shops and Cabela’s Outdoor Fund. Partners in the broader project also include Colorado Parks and Wildlife and the US Fish and Wildlife Service. Colorado TU is grateful to all of those who are making this ambitious native trout recovery program possible.

Images below show the tented area and construction process, culminating in backfill material placed behind one of the wing walls for the new fish barrier.

Farewells to TU stalwarts

As 2021 wound to its close, Colorado TU lost two committed long-time volunteer leaders, both recipients of the prestigious Silver Trout award. In December, Michael McGoldrick and John Trammell passed away - but both left important conservation legacies.

Michael McGoldrick first engaged with Trout Unlimited in the midwest near his then-home in Chicago, but once settled in Colorado he stepped up and served as Colorado TU’s treasurer for multiple terms including at a critical juncture - through the market crash and recession of 2008. Michael’s background in finance equipped him well to provide leadership, and having earlier in his career seen financial debates distract other nonprofits from their core mission, he worked hard to ensure that CTU’s finances were stable and not a source of disruption from the organization’s mission. His wise and thoughtful financial stewardship ensured that CTU did not see its assets undermined by the market crash of 2008.

Michael had diverse charitable interests from the arts to conservation, and his most lasting legacy with Colorado TU was in creating a stronger culture of philanthropy. With his encouragement, the annual auction was upgraded into a Gala with a greater emphasis on charitable support, sponsorships, and celebration of leaders in river conservation.

Michael was also a founder of CTU’s charitable donor society for those giving $1000 or more, the River Stewardship Council. From its humble beginning with Michael’s initial contribution, the River Stewardship Council has grown into a key sustaining funding source for trout conservation work in Colorado. Michael encouraged the RSC program to offer opportunities for donors to connect and engage, building a deeper connection with the work they supported through activities such as tours and fishing trips to experience waters benefiting from CTU’s work. He was a regular participant in RSC activities, and from his contribution as the first RSC donor through all of the years following, he remained a committed donor and conservationist.

Michael’s kindness and good spirits made him a well-loved presence through all of the many TU programs in which he took part. As his long-time partner Terry Galpin-Plattner said, he lived a life that was lively, loving, and curmudgeonly.

Michael McGoldrick - photo courtesy of Terry Galpin-Plattner.

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Over three decades, John Trammell provided volunteer leadership at all levels of the Trout Unlimited organization - from his local Grand Valley Anglers chapter to the National Resource Board providing the grassroots voice on TU’s national conservation agenda.

John’s professional background was as a geologist, and he brought a science-based approach to his efforts as a conservation volunteer and advocate. A prime example was the stream characterization study he conducted with his friend and colleague Dan Powell on West Creek in Unaweep Canyon – a highly detailed assessment that proved invaluable baseline data when a truck spill led to a fish kill in the creek some years later. His scientific knowledge and approach similarly helped inform a wide range of TU advocacy efforts.

John had a special passion for native trout. As an angler, he set out to catch all of the west’s native trout subspecies and add them to his ‘lifetime list’. As a volunteer, he worked tirelessly on projects to help restore Colorado River cutthroat trout in nearby home waters on the Grand Mesa and the Roan Plateau. From fencing and riparian planting projects along Trapper Creek to installing Whitlock-Vibert boxes in a converted refrigerator to jump-start cutthroat populations on the Grand Mesa, he brought commitment and creativity to native trout recovery.

In all that he did as a conservation leader, John worked with good humor and a kind spirit that earned the confidence and affection of all those who were fortunate enough to cross his path. He will be deeply missed, but his legacy lives on in the memory of those he helped inspire – including his daughter, native fish biologist Melissa Trammell – and in the home waters where his efforts helped secure native trout for future generations.

You can see some reflections on John’s involvement with TU native trout conservation in the short film Decades (available here) issued on Colorado TU’s 50th anniversary.  The segment featuring John and Melissa begins at 6:30.

John Trammell with a greenback cutthroat trout from spawn-taking at Zimmerman Lake.

One Step Forward in Protecting the Denver South Platte

Local residents and advocates for the Denver South Platte received an early holiday gift last week, as the Colorado Water Quality Control Commission agreed to set a hearing in September 2022 to reconsider its 2020 decision rejecting a strengthening of water quality protections for the improving Denver South Platte and lower Clear Creek. A coalition of groups from Green Latinos to Denver Trout Unlimited to Conservation Colorado joined in requesting the re-hearing of this issue; their petition was approved by the Commission last week. (You can read more coverage with the Colorado Sun here.)

Many of the community and conservation partners who petitioned for this rulemaking also took part in an earlier statewide rulemaking, where they defeated a broader proposal to weaken “antidegradation” protections for a range of Colorado waterways. While the Commission rejected the rollback proposed earlier this year, they did not at that time agree to revisit the standards applying to the Denver South Platte and Lower Clear Creek - even though the level of protection on those reaches was inconsistent with the Commission’s statewide policies.

The issue arose in 2020 when the Commission rejected antidegradation protections for the reaches, despite them qualifying under the statewide rules and being recommended by staff. Community members and allies were particularly upset by the Commission’s rationale which said such water quality protection was appropriate for “pristine mountain waters” – raising significant pushback from urban river advocates and local communities on environmental justice grounds.

“So much work has gone into improving the Denver South Platte – with even more to come – and it makes no sense to allow weakened water quality protections to jeopardize all that progress,” said Sam Agnew, President of Trout Unlimited’s Denver Chapter. “We’re grateful that the Commission recognized the need to take a fresh look at this issue and hope the new rulemaking will give the river the stronger protections it deserves. Denver TU will stay vigilant in monitoring this issue in 2022 and any other plans that arise that could possibly negatively impact our home water.”

The new Winter 2022 issue of High Country Angler is live!

Check out the new Winter 2022 issue of High Country Angler e-zine! Featuring these stories:

  • DENVER FLY FISHING SHOW BY BENNETT J. MINTZ

  • Q&A WITH LANDON MAYER BY THE ARTICULATE FLY

  • CLARKS FORK OF THE YELLOWSTONE BY BRIAN LARUE

  • OF ELK, ICE, AND ANGLING BY HAYDEN MELLSOP

  • TROUT HEALTH BEYOND THE WATER’S EDGE BY NANCY JOHNSTON BRAMLETT

  • WINTER FLY FISHING HOT SPOTS BY PETER STITCHER

  • STREAM GIRLS RETURN TO THE WATER BY BARBARA LUNEAU

  • FIT TO BE TIED BY JOEL EVANS

  • A CONVERSATION WITH EMMA BROWN BY HCA

  • THE LAST CAST BY JOHN NICKUM