Denver Water Renews Moratorium on Two Forks

In 2004, the South Platte Protection Plan (SPPP) was adopted by the US Forest Service as a local alternative to Wild and Scenic Designation for the South Platte River from Elevenmile Dam to Strontia Springs and its North Fork below Bailey. The SPPP was the result of years of negotiation among water users, local governments, and conservation interests, including Trout Unlimited. Key elements of the plan include:

  • A streamflow management plan with minimum flow commitments (which have never been violated in the plan’s 20 years) and optimal flow targets.

  • Creation of a $1 million endowment fund to support projects benefiting the river’s outstandingly remarkable values, including fisheries, wildlife, recreation, and historical significance. Through the South Platte Enhancement Board, more than $1 million in grants have been awarded for projects.

  • A Forest Plan amendment setting land management standards intended to protect habitat along the river corridor on the Pike National Forest.

  • The creation of the watershed protection partnership, now known as the Coalition for the Upper South Platte, which has been vital in addressing wildfire impacts on the watershed and promoting on-the-ground improvement projects.

A thorny issue in negotiating the SPPP was the question of Two Forks Dam. While the EPA had vetoed the proposed reservoir in 1991, Denver Water still holds a Right of Way for the land that would be occupied by a smaller version of the project at the North Fork/Mainstem confluence. As part of the SPPP, Denver Water agreed to a 20-year moratorium on any permitting efforts to advance development of that right of way, as well as permanently relinquishing its conditional water rights for what would have been the larger version of Two Forks (stretching into Cheesman Canyon).

Under the moratorium, Denver Water aimed to work with other interests to pursue alternative water supply projects that could achieve yields equivalent to those projected under Two Forks and meet future water demands for the Denver area. Some efforts are advancing, notably the expansion of Gross Reservoir, a concept previously proposed by environmental stakeholders as an alternative to Two Forks. However, progress has been slower than anticipated when the SPPP was adopted. The moratorium was set to expire in June of this year.

Fortunately, the Denver Water Board decided at its June 12 meeting to extend the moratorium for an additional ten years. In its resolution, the Board also recommitted to the collaborative SPPP framework and to continued efforts on water supply alternatives to a Two Forks Dam and Reservoir. This further defers any threat of development efforts for Two Forks, and if adequate progress can be made on alternatives, Denver Water will consider permanently abandoning the Two Forks Right of Way.

Trout Unlimited was gratified to see Denver Water reaffirm its commitment to collaboration in water management and to seeking more environmentally sound alternatives to the extremely damaging Two Forks Dam proposal. Trout in the South Platte and the anglers that enjoy them can breathe a sigh of relief, knowing that Denver Water will continue to work with partners under the SPPP to maintain the South Platte’s fishery values while continuing to deliver needed water to the Denver metro area.

Upcoming Weekend Events in Glenwood Springs

Get ready for an exciting weekend in Glenwood Springs packed with fun, friends, and fly-fishing! Join the Ferdinand Hayden chapter all weekend! Here’s a rundown of the events you won't want to miss:

Friday, July 19th: On Tap with RareWaters x Hookers Fly Shop

Kick off your weekend with a bang at the On Tap event hosted by RareWaters and Hookers Fly Shop. From 4-6pm, come hang out at Hookers Rooftop Bar and retail location at 719 Grand Ave. You'll have the chance to meet the crew and enjoy the first round on RareWaters. Special guest Zach Otte will be onsite painting a custom piece, with all proceeds benefiting Hookers’ local Ferdinand Hayden chapter. Plus, RareWaters will unveil a special offering for the 2024 season exclusively for attendees. Don’t miss out—bring your friends and join the fun!

Saturday, July 20th: Meet Tom Rosenbauer at Hookers Rooftop

On Saturday, from 4-8pm, head back to Hookers Rooftop to meet the legendary Tom Rosenbauer from Orvis! You'll have the opportunity to test-cast the new Orvis Helios Fly Rods, chat with Tom, and gain insights from his vast fly-fishing knowledge. This is a unique chance to learn from one of the best in the field, so make sure to mark your calendar.


Sunday, July 21st: A Confluence Cookout

Wrap up your weekend with a Confluence Cookout hosted by the Ferdinand Hayden Chapter of Trout Unlimited. Join us from 3-7pm at Two Rivers Park, Riverside Shelter near the boat ramp. Enjoy a delicious picnic with burgers, brats, hot dogs, sides, and beer—all free for TU members in the Roaring Fork Valley. This is a fantastic opportunity to meet the folks working to revitalize one of the oldest TU chapters in the country, discuss chapter activities, and share your ideas. Bring a non-member friend and get them signed up!

We look forward to seeing you at these events for a weekend filled with camaraderie, learning, and great times. Share this with your friends and come be part of the Glenwood Springs community spirit!

Free Fly Tying, Fly Casting and Fly Fishing Classes

Join CTU and Cabela’s at the Cabela’s Thorton store (14050 Lincoln St, Thornton, CO 80023) for free fly fishing instruction July 27th.

No registration required.

Intro to Fly Fishing` Class

Saturday, July 27, 2024 for 9:00am to 12:00pm
Instructor: Bob Berlin – In the Conference Room

We will focus on an introduction to fly fishing to include, but not limited to rods, rod types, rod weights, reels, matching reels to rods, fly lines and types of fly lines, what type to use for certain circumstances, leaders and leader materials, tippets and tippet material, flies and when to use certain flies, reading water and what to use in different types of water.

At the conclusion of the fly fishing text book lesson we will move outside and have some casting lessons with a 9 ft 5wt rod and reel setup.  The time allowed for this will be dependent on when the Q&A for the text book lessons are completed.

                 

Free Beginner Fly Tying Class

Saturday, July 27, 2024 for 1:00pm to 3:00pm
Instructor: Jack Racciatti - In the Conference Room

We will focus on how to use a vise and tools as well as materials management.  Difficulty of fly and technique will be determined by the level of the students in the class at the time of the class start.
Cabela’s will provide vises, tools and materials to tie a fly that the students decide they would like to learn. 

We will consider additional flies if time and materials are available

Free Fly Casting Class

Saturday, July 27, 2024 for 1:00pm to 4:00pm
Instructor: Frank Whispell – On the lawn north of the store

We will assist you with several different techniques to get you on the water and catching trout and other fish and hopefully not too many trees, bushes and rocks!

We will have an area suitable for casting setup on the lawn on the north side of the store when you drive in.  We will also have a couple target rings for you try your skill at casting a fly rod.

Trout Unlimited and Irrigators, Working Together to Protect Rivers and Agriculture

By: Richard Van Gytenbeek-Project Mgr. TU and Environmental Representative-CBRT   

Elk Creek and Canyon Creeks both begin on the south side of the Flat Tops mountain range in north central Colorado and flow southward to confluence with the Colorado River main stem downstream from Glenwood Springs, CO. Agricultural irrigators have diverted flows from these creeks for over a hundred years. Unfortunately, many of these irrigation diversion structures are fish barriers preventing spawning fish from the Colorado River from moving upstream. In 2015 Trout Unlimited (TU) and Colorado Parks and Wildlife (CPW) began working with the Ware and Hinds Ditch Company to build a fish passage channel around the company’s diversion dam. Completed in 2018, the project would become the catalyst for additional projects in Elk Creek and neighboring upstream Canyon Creek.

In 2021, again working with CPW, TU completed a retrofit of the I-70 culvert system that conveys Canyon Creek under the interstate. Like the Ware and Hinds project this enabled thousands of Colorado River fish to move upstream and successfully spawn.

During this time period, both of these projects were taking place against the backdrop of an important planning effort, the Middle Colorado Integrated Water Management Plan (MCIWMP). The plan was spearheaded by the Middle Colorado Watershed Council (MCWC) and completed in 2021. One of the most important goals of this plan is to work with agricultural irrigators to upgrade diversion infrastructure thereby improving diversion efficiency and enabling fish passage. With two successful fish passage projects completed in each Elk and Canyon Creeks fulfilling the goals of the IWMP, TU began to move upstream in each basin, partnering with irrigators to upgrade their diversions and return spawning fish to the creeks.

Called the Middle Colorado Agricultural Collaborative (MCAC), this multiple-phase project began in 2022. The first phase sought to find and partner with willing irrigators to create conceptual plans to improve their diversion dams and headgates. By the end of Phase 1, TU was partnering with three owners to complete five diversion upgrade projects. These projects, if built would conservatively open 7 miles of Elk Creek and 3 miles of Canyon Creek.

The second phase of the MCAC took the Phase 1 conceptual plans and developed full construction plans for each of the five projects. Phase 2 began in the late summer of 2023 and is now complete with construction-ready plans (spring of 2024).

The third phase of the MCAC project, scheduled for fall of 2024, will construct three of the five projects having secured ~4.6 million dollars in grant funding. The remaining two projects will be constructed in the next phase(s) with funding currently being pursued.

The MCAC, while driven by TU, is the product of incredible array of partners: Roseman Ditch Company, Meadow Creek Ranch, J-Wolverton Ditch Company, CPW, Middle Colorado Watershed Council, Wright Water Engineers and by our generous funders: Bureau of Reclamation, CWCB, Colorado River District and the Colorado Basin Roundtable. By working together, TU and agricultural producers continue to demonstrate that productive agriculture and a healthy environment can coexist and complement one another.

 

The New Summer 2024 Issue of High Country Angler is Live!

Your new Summer 2024 issue of

High Country Angler is here!

Check out the Summer 2024 issue of High Country Angler e-zine, including these stories:

· Landon Mayer with Fishing on the Edge;

· Brian LaRue with Conejos River: Hop, Fish, Hop!;

· Colorado TU Staff with a photo essay of Trout in the Classroom;

· Hayden Mellsop with The Gift of Summer;

· Peter Stitcher with The Crane Fly: Spring's Unsung Hero Fly Patterns;

· Other columns by Barbara Luneau, Joel Evans, and CTU Staff

2024 River Conservation and Fly Fishing Camp - Another HUGE Success!

Last week (June 9th - 15th) Colorado Trout Unlimited volunteers and partners came together in Almont, CO to host this year’s River Conservation and Fly Fishing Camp. This year we had 23 adventurous teens attend from all over Colorado and beyond. We also had 15 Senior Counselors and 6 Junior Counselors volunteer and help lead, mentor, and guide our campers this year.

Below are some fun preliminary pictures from this year’s camp!

A special thank you goes out to our incredible volunteer staff: Barbara Luneau - Camp Director and our Senior and Junior Counselors - Cameron Bratina, Grant Compton, Jon Gartz, Stahsic Green, Josh Greene, David Haeusler, Mark Hanson, Reau Heinitz, Joe Johnson, Audrey Kenney, Chris Lamson, Daven Masche, Jonathan Onken, Mark Rayman, Trenton Sendziak, Dick Shinton, Ben Ward, Levi Ward, and Jim Williams

We also humbly thank our program partners, CTU & TU Staff, and speakers: Dan Branch, Aquatic Biologist for CPW; Cole Brittain, Fisheries Biologist for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; Joshua Duplechian, TU Senior Producer; Natalie Flowers, CTU Youth Education Coordinator; Rachel Juritsch, Adams County 4-H CSU Extension; Bianka Martinez, Ambassador and National Program Coordinator for Hunters of Color; Sarah Porterfield, TU Water Policy Associate; Liz Werner from Adams County 4-H CSU Extension; and Roaring Judy Hatchery Staff.

We are so grateful and this camp could not be done without you!

She Was No Average Jo

Bette “Jo” Evans with her husband, Tom, and her son, Tommy.

This month Colorado’s water and trout lost a grand champion, and Colorado Trout Unlimited lost a beloved colleague.  Bette “Jo” Evans died on June 3 after a prolonged illness.  She was 79.

Jo fought for Colorado’s streams and trout as a lobbyist for Colorado TU and other conservation organizations at the Colorado General Assembly. She lobbied for CTU through the 1980s, 90s and until 2002, at which point she retired and passed the baton to her daughter Jen Boulton, who had worked with her as an associate lobbyist for several years prior to Jo’s retirement. 

Advocacy is a necessary function of any conservation organization, and Jo was CTU’s greatest advocate.  She could have made several times what CTU and other conservation groups paid her, if she had wanted to advocate for other interests.  But those interests did not interest her, or stoke the fire that burned in her belly.  She wanted to be, and was, a force for water and trout, and for decades was one of the most passionate, articulate and effective lobbyists in Colorado.  She was in it for the cause, and she was in it for the long run.  She loved working for and with the people of Trout Unlimited.  We were utterly blessed to have Jo.

Jen said it best on the morning of June 3 when she posted this on Facebook: “So, at 2:51 this morning my parents were reunited when Bette Jo Evans left this world behind. We have lost an incredible warrior for clean air and water, and the Earth mourns its loss, while Heaven rejoices. Rest well Mom, the entire State of Colorado is eternally in debt for your efforts on its behalf. We will remember you in every gurgling stream, in the winds in the pines, and in all the wild places for which you spent a lifetime fighting.”

Former CTU Executive Director Dave Taylor shares his reflections on Jo:

I first met Jo when I began working for CTU in the mid-1980s.  Each year TU and a handful of conservation, environmental and wildlife organizations would cobble together some funding and employ Jo as our lobbyist at the Capital, with CTU being a principal funder.  Jo liked all the organizations, but had a soft spot for CTU.

Year after year, legislative session after session, Jo effectively worked both sides of the aisle to keep Colorado’s air and water clean, and our streams flowing.  Jo was indefatigable in her pursuit of quality legislation for water and fish, and equally determined to battle down bad bills that would negatively impact our state’s coldwater resource.

Jo had immense credibility with legislators, gobs of it.  Regardless of a legislator’s party affiliation or point of view, they all respected and admired Jo.  She lobbied from a brilliantly articulated point of logic and pragmatism, and she smacked of integrity and character.

She knew legislators from the obscure to the powerful, Senate and House leaders, and Governors and their staffs.  They all knew and admired Jo. They knew she would speak in a fact-based and logical manner, rationally but fiercely advocating for Colorado’s natural resources, especially water and trout.

Jo Evans fought the good fight on behalf of us all.  And for that I shed a tear and am forever thankful.  And I am forever blessed to have known Jo and called her my friend.  She was special.

CTU Executive Director David Nickum shares his reflections on Jo:

When I first moved to Colorado in the 1990s working for National Trout Unlimited, I quickly discovered some of the key conservation leaders who fought for Colorado’s trout and watersheds, and from whom I could learn. Jo was top of the list, and I was blessed to have the chance to work alongside her for several years and to see first-hand how effectively she represented TU and the cause of coldwater conservation. At a time when there were hardly any professional lobbyists working in Colorado on behalf of conservation, Jo could be an army of one when needed – but also a great collaborator and as kind and giving of a colleague as you could hope to meet.

Jo was a force of nature, and a force for nature. Over some two decades of dedicated work, if there was a significant piece of conservation legislation passed or a major threat defeated at the General Assembly, Jo was a central piece in making it happen.

A former school teacher, Jo brought a knack for explaining complex issues in simple yet accurate terms. Knowing that her clients could never match the deep pocketbooks of other competing interests, she ensured that she and they were respected and appreciated for what they could bring: a sincere dedication to Colorado’s natural resources, a deep knowledge and expertise of the issues, and the utmost credibility: if Jo said it was so, you could take it to the bank. She leveraged those qualities to earn the respect of legislators on both sides of the aisle, and to achieve landmark bipartisan legislative measures from securing conservation funding through the lottery under Great Outdoors Colorado - to empowering the state instream flow program to acquire water rights to improve historically degraded environments.

Today, Colorado’s conservation community has multiple lobbyists representing our state’s natural resources at the General Assembly, including Jo’s daughter Jen Boulton, whose own skill and commitment was a source of deep pride for Jo. As a conservation community we have worked with legislative leaders to secure key victories such as this year’s passage of legislation to protect Colorado waters and wetlands after last year’s rollback of the Clean Water Act by the Supreme Court. But we can never forget those giants on whose shoulders we stand – and Jo’s long-time commitment and effectiveness not only secured some of Colorado’s most important legislation, but she paved the way for all of those who have followed in her footsteps.

Colorado Collective Giveaway

We are thrilled to announce a fantastic giveaway featuring some of the best fly fishing brands that Colorado has to offer. Together, we are celebrating the Colorado waters we call home. This is your chance to win premium gear and accessories perfect for your next fishing adventure!

The winner will receive the prize pack below, valued at over $5,000:

  • RareWaters - Prize: 4 Rod Pass ($600 value)

  • Ross Reels - Prize: Colorado Cutt Reel ($495 value)

  • Airflo - Prize: Line, Leader, Tippet Package 

  • Dyna-King: Kingfisher Vise ($345 value)

  • Yakoda -: Gear Transport, Streamer Stash, Treeline fleece, Utility Pack & Wallet ($497 value)

  • OnWater - Prize: 10x onWater+ memberships for you and your friends! ($490 value) plus a free extended trial of onWater+ for any entry

  • Riversmith - Prize: Riversmith CONVOY Collection Bundle":PackOut Bag - $50 value Gear-Roll - $200 value Hauler - $250 value

  • Flylords - Prize: $350 value Flylords Gift card

  • RepYourWater - Prize: $350 value Gift card

  • Umpqua - Prize: Just add water kit: Loaded NorthFork Pack (Leader/Tippet, Tools and Loaded Fly Box) ($500 value) 

  • Boulder Boat Works - Prize: Boulder Boat Works Experience: Guided Fishing & Boat Demo in a Boulder Boat Works Boat on the Roaring Fork River, Exclusive Shop Tour, and BBW Swag ($775 value)

  • Colorado Trout Unlimited - Prize: TU one-year membership and swag bag

Governor Signs Law to Protect Colorado Waters

On May 29, 2024, in Silverthorne, Governor Polis officially signed into law HB 24-1379, making Colorado the first state to legislatively restore state protections to waters and wetlands that lost federal protection when the Supreme Court removed long-standing Clean Water Act jurisdiction from many wetlands and seasonal streams.

The 2023 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Sackett v EPA created the largest rollback of protection under the Clean Water Act in that law’s 50+ year history. While Colorado had strong state-level protections for point-source discharges such as from an industrial or water treatment facility, the Sackett decision potentially left many Colorado wetlands and seasonal streams at risk of being dug out or filled in – Colorado had no program equivalent to Section 404 of the Clean Water Act that handled permitting for dredge and fill activities in waters of the United States.

Now, thanks to Governor Polis and HB 24-1379’s dedicated sponsors (Speaker of the House Julie McCluskie, House Ag Committee Chair Rep. Karen McCormick, and Senate Ag Committee Chair Sen. Dylan Roberts), Colorado’s wetlands and headwater streams are again protected.

Some of the key provisions in HB 24-1379 include:

·        Directs that the standard of protection used for Colorado wetlands will be at least as strong as previously existing federal criteria, and can be made stronger if necessary to maintain the integrity of Colorado’s waters.

  • Establishes a new dredge and fill permitting program housed with the Water Quality Control Division/Commission, and with measures in place to ensure the agency secures additional staff and funding if needed to ensure the timely processing of permits.

  • Establishes a statewide general permit for “isolated wetlands” beyond 1500 feet from rivers, which includes best management practices to ensure protection of water quality. This was a key issue given the important role such wetlands play as natural filters maintaining downstream water quality.

The end result is a model for other states to emulate in the aftermath of the Supreme Court’s decision, and is arguably the most significant water quality legislation that Colorado has seen since the original 1973 passage of the Colorado Water Quality Control Act. Colorado TU thanks Governor Polis, Speaker McCluskie, Rep. McCormick, and Sen. Roberts for their exemplary work in protecting headwaters, wetlands, and water quality for Colorado.