water sports – The Denver Post https://www.denverpost.com Colorado breaking news, sports, business, weather, entertainment. Mon, 15 Jul 2024 23:46:17 +0000 en-US hourly 30 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 https://www.denverpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/cropped-DP_bug_denverpost.jpg?w=32 water sports – The Denver Post https://www.denverpost.com 32 32 111738712 Man dies while tubing Arkansas River near Florence https://www.denverpost.com/2024/07/15/tubing-death-arkansas-river-florence-colorado/ Mon, 15 Jul 2024 19:05:41 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=6491976 A man died Saturday while tubing the Arkansas River in Fremont County, according to Colorado Parks and Wildlife.

A group of seven people started floating the river in inner tubes near Portland, about five miles east of Florence, on Saturday morning with a plan to float to their campsite on private land a few miles downstream, the agency said in a news release Monday.

The group became separated while tubing and a man in his mid-30s fell off his tube into the water.

A person fishing nearby saw the man unresponsive in the river, brought him to shore and started CPR, according to state officials.

Rangers and emergency services responded to the scene around 11 a.m., and the man was later pronounced dead.

Rangers did not find a life jacket on or near the man. His name and cause of death will be released by the Fremont County Coroner’s Office.

Colorado is on track to see a record-high number of water fatalities this year, according to CPW.

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6491976 2024-07-15T13:05:41+00:00 2024-07-15T17:46:17+00:00
Colorado officials “begging” people to wear life jackets this Fourth of July as deaths near record-setting pace https://www.denverpost.com/2024/07/02/colorado-water-deaths-drownings-2024-life-jackets-fourt-of-july/ Tue, 02 Jul 2024 19:30:22 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=6477105 Colorado Parks and Wildlife officials say the heat will be on for those recreating on the water this summer as the agency ups enforcement amid a wave of drownings and water-related deaths.

Still early in the summer season, Colorado Parks and Wildlife public information officer Rachel Gonzales said there have already been around 20 recreation-related water fatalities across the state so far this year.

“It’s not even the Fourth of July weekend yet, and we’re at almost 20 recreation-related water fatalities. That’s not okay,” Gonzales said. “We as an agency are stepping up patrol and enforcement.”

For the past couple years, Colorado Parks and Wildlife has kept an unofficial count of water-related deaths that occur in state parks or were reported to the agency. So far this year, water-related deaths are outpacing last year, when 32 people died throughout the summer season. This year is trending closely with 2022, when a record-breaking 42 people died while recreating in the water.

Read the full story at our partner, Summit Daily

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6477105 2024-07-02T13:30:22+00:00 2024-07-02T11:37:23+00:00
Rafting accident claims life of New Castle resident on Colorado River https://www.denverpost.com/2024/06/25/new-castle-colorado-river-rafting-death/ Tue, 25 Jun 2024 19:38:26 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=6468868 By Taylor Cramer, The Post Independent

An accident during a family rafting trip on the Colorado River claimed the life of New Castle resident Matt Clemente on Saturday. An experienced boatman, Matt was on the river near New Castle with his three children, his brother Nick, and Nick’s dog.

According to family friend Mary Sundblom, the family encountered trouble when their raft hit a large wave. Despite Matt’s efforts to navigate safely, the raft filled with water and flipped. Matt was not wearing a personal flotation device.

The accident happened near a section of the river known at the “Dino Hole.” According to Sundblom, who learned of the incident from Matt’s brother and children, Matt saw other boats taking a rough line and attempted to navigate to a safer route, resulting in the raft being overwhelmed by the waves. Nick was able to swim himself and Matt’s oldest child, Jasper, 9, to shore.

Sundblom said nearby rafting guides with the Defiance Rafting Company managed to rescue Matt’s two other children further downstream. Nick’s dog, Ooggie Boogie, was found alive Sunday by Garfield County sheriffs. According to a Garfield County Search and Rescue Facebook group post (which has since been deleted), a rescue team of eight members and two water crafts were dispatched, which located Matt’s body downstream on a sandbar near the New Castle boat ramp Saturday evening. His body was retrieved using a helicopter around 7:35 p.m.

Read more at www.postindependent.com.

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6468868 2024-06-25T13:38:26+00:00 2024-06-25T13:38:26+00:00
Clear Creek restrictions go into effect due to high water https://www.denverpost.com/2024/06/05/clear-creek-swimming-float-restrictions/ Wed, 05 Jun 2024 15:55:05 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=6448655 The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office and Golden Police Department started limiting activities on part of Clear Creek, as of 8 a.m. Wednesday, due to fast-moving water and floating debris.

“Water height and flows are expected to rise as the heavy snowpack continues to melt in the coming days,” the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office said.

People are not allowed to use inner tubes, rafts, “belly boats” or go swimming, according to the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office order.

Kayaks, white water rafting and professional raft trips are exempt from the restrictions, but the Jefferson County sheriff encourages people attempting those activities to exercise extreme caution.

Read the full story from our partners at denver7.com.

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6448655 2024-06-05T09:55:05+00:00 2024-06-05T09:57:20+00:00
Rafting season is here and the whitewater forecast for northern Colorado looks good https://www.denverpost.com/2024/05/10/rafting-season-2024-colorado-forecast-rivers/ Fri, 10 May 2024 12:11:21 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=6049724 Early indications suggest Colorado could have a very good rafting season through spring and into the summer, especially in the northern half of the state.

Predicting seasonal rafting conditions is difficult because factors besides snowpack depths always come into play, such as temperature trends, which affect the rate of runoff, as well as the amount and timing of monsoon moisture in the summer. At the moment, though, things look promising.

River basins in the northern half of the state are showing above-normal snowpack across the board. The Yampa-White River basin in the northwestern corner of the state is at 111% of normal, while the South Platte is 110% and the Colorado River headwaters basin is at 103%. Basins in the southern half of the state are below normal with the Arkansas at 84% and the Gunnison at 79%. The San Miguel, Dolores, Animas and San Juan basin is at 67%.

That figure for the Arkansas River basin is misleading from the standpoint of rafting because it includes automated data collection sites that drag down the overall percentage, according to Bob Hamel, executive director of the Arkansas River Outfitters Association.

“The total Arkansas Basin is 84%, but the area of the Arkansas Basin that the raftng industry depends on is way over 100%,” Hamel said. “We have been above 100% for most of the winter, and certainly with (Thursday’s) storm, we are way above.”

Rafting has already begun on the Arkansas and is about to begin in northern Colorado. Rocky Mountain Adventures will begin running the Cache La Poudre west of Fort Collins this weekend.

“The Poudre is at 106%, so we’re really happy with that number,” said co-owner Kyle Johnson. “Things can change quick, but we think this mild weather we are currently experiencing is an excellent way to start our season.”

That’s because temperature spikes in the spring increase the rate of runoff, shortening that part of the season, while mild temperatures stretch it out. The National Weather Service’s 30-day forecast for May is calling for mild temperatures.

“I think it means, hopefully, a nice, slow, metered melt that provides us with really great water levels for a long period of time, and hopefully extends our season into late summer,” Johnson said. “We like to see a nice historical bell curve without really high peak flows — just a nice gradual uptick to seasonal high flows, then a nice metering down to the end of the season. I think we have enough snow in the mountains to provide extended medium to high water flows. And if the weather will stay mild for us, that’s exactly what we’ll see.”

Although the snowpack in the southern half of the state is less than abundant, outfitters there may have a better year than last year according to David Costlow, executive director of the Colorado River Outfitters Association.

“I’m a little more optimistic for the southern half this year than last year, because we got some late snow, and it hasn’t been 90 degrees — hasn’t even hardly been 80 degrees on the Front Range,” Costlow said. “The outlook doesn’t look like it’s going to be super hot anytime soon. Up high, it has been cool, and there’s still snow up there compared to this time last year. We have a pretty good percent of that snowpack waiting to come down, and that will be good for us.”

In fact, significant snow fell in the mountains this week, with more to come at many locations.

Costlow said outfitters around the state are encouraged by the rate of reservations they’re getting.

“They’re telling me bookings are looking good,” Costlow said. “Some are saying they’re really strong.”

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6049724 2024-05-10T06:11:21+00:00 2024-05-10T15:30:20+00:00
A Colorado river guide is on a quest to set a new women’s record for rowing from California to Hawaii https://www.denverpost.com/2023/10/19/worlds-toughest-row-race-kelsey-pfendler-colorado/ Thu, 19 Oct 2023 16:32:32 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5801064 BUENA VISTA — Imagine embarking on a road trip from Baltimore to San Francisco — 2,800 rolling miles of American highway ahead, with plentiful stops for sustenance and respite.

Now take away the land and the air-conditioned SUV. Replace it with endless miles of ocean and a 28-foot boat powered only by human stamina. Rest comes in the form of a seemingly endless string of two-hour catnaps, wedged between backbreaking shifts pulling oars.

No snooze button, no days off, no excuses — just open water from the California coast to Hawaii. Two thousand eight hundred miles.

Daunting? Sure. But Buena Vista resident Kelsey Pfendler says she wouldn’t want it any other way. The 29-year-old is a modern-day vagabond who runs rivers as a raft guide, patrols ski slopes when the snow flies and lives out of a revamped 1984 VW Vanagon with 310,000 miles on the odometer.

“My whole life has been trying to figure out how to be in the middle of nowhere in a boat,” said Pfendler, who has lived in this Chaffee County town for the better part of a decade. “I have such a huge respect for water, and there’s nothing more powerful than the open ocean. But that shouldn’t be the reason for not doing something.”

That something is the World’s Toughest Row, Pacific edition. The grueling race across Earth’s largest ocean launches in June from Monterey, California, and ends in Hanalei Bay on the Hawaiian island of Kauai. Pfendler is part of a four-woman team, dubbed Hericane Rowing, that will power one of about 20 boats competing in the race. More teams may still jump in as the starting date approaches.

They will attempt to break the women’s record for the course — currently 34 days, 14 hours, 20 minutes.

“I think she has a chance to beat it,” Travis Hochard, the general manager of River Runners, said on a brilliant August morning. Nearby, Pfendler readied a group for a 10-mile rafting trip down the Arkansas River. “If her team is anything like her, I’m sure they’ll do great things.”

They’ll need to, said Evan Stratton, who serves as a safety officer for World’s Toughest Row. He completed his own 50-day ocean voyage four years ago, in the Talisker Whisky Atlantic Challenge, as part of the Fight Oar Die rowing team made up of U.S. military veterans.

Whether it’s 45-knot wind gusts or 25- to 30-foot waves — or both — a potentially fatal event is just one bad ocean swell away, the former Marine said.

Stratton would know.

He was the weather router for a Fight Oar Die team that nearly perished in the waning days of 2022 when its boat overturned and emergency communications largely failed.

“You’re going across the ocean in one of the most primitive ways you can,” said Stratton, who lives in Aurora. “More people summit Mt. Everest in a year than do an ocean row. It’s one of the only sports in the world where you can’t train to the task you’re going to be in.”

But that doesn’t mean training is off the table — far from it.

Hericane Rowing team leader Kelsey Pfendler runs out of the West Tenmile Creek ahead of team members during a grueling sleep deprivation training exercise in Summit County on July 21, 2023. Pfendler and team members had to build a wooden cart to then pull each other up a bike path along Vail Pass, which involved stops to stretch, do push ups, switching to pull, push and carry the cart and dunking in the river, only a small part of a very long day/night of team building, mentally and physically exhausting training in preparation for next year's Great Pacific Race. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
Hericane Rowing team member Kelsey Pfendler runs out of the West Tenmile Creek ahead of teammates during a grueling training exercise in Summit County on July 21, 2023. The women had to build a wooden cart to pull each other up a bike path along Vail Pass, which involved stops to stretch, do push-ups, and pull, push and carry the cart. The exercise was part of a long day/night of team building and sleep deprivation training in preparation for next year’s Pacific crossing. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

“I came out here to work on the river”

Though Pfendler doesn’t live anywhere near the coast, she is no stranger to water — or to the ocean.

“I spent a lot of life with water,” she said.

Pfendler sports several tattoos with nautical themes, along with an illustration of Mt. Marcy — New York’s highest peak — on her right bicep. It hints at her origins: She grew up in the tiny town of Lee Center in the Adirondack Mountains, just over 100 miles northwest of Albany.

She was on the water early. Shortly after her 18th birthday, she was guiding her first raft trip. Many more followed, mostly on the Black and Moose rivers in northern New York.

“I didn’t know this was a job,” she said, recalling her introduction to the world of guiding.

Pfendler’s attention soon shifted west, where the rivers run longer and the water churns harder. In 2016, she made the Arkansas, with its world-class rapids cutting canyons through the Rockies, her destination.

But the annual rafting season is short in Colorado’s high country, so Pfendler supplements her income with trips through the Grand Canyon in Arizona. She works ski patrol, emergency response and avalanche control at Colorado’s Copper Mountain during the winter. She also joined the ambulance crew in Chaffee County just as the pandemic was spreading across the state.

“I vaccinated this whole place during COVID,” she said.

Pfendler’s transport and bed are one and the same: her Vanagon. Inside, there’s a diesel heater, a propane stove and a solar-powered fridge. On a small bookshelf toward the rear sit several outdoor-related titles — “Roadside Geology of Colorado,” Anne LaBastille’s “Woodswoman,” and Ernest Hemingway’s “The Old Man and the Sea,” both in English and Spanish.

And of course there’s Don Lago’s “The Powell Expedition,” an account of John Wesley Powell’s 1869 exploration of the Green and Colorado rivers, including through the Grand Canyon, where Pfendler has spent so many days on the water.

“If I had to pay rent, I wouldn’t be able to fund this race,” she said of the World’s Toughest Row. “This is how I can make these dreams work.”

Kristen Hofer, one of three Oregon women who make up the rest of Hericane Rowing, says Pfendler may live a thousand miles away, but her tireless, no-limits attitude isn’t muted by geographical barriers. Her teammates already see her as a team leader who will be key to turning aspirations into accomplishments.

“We were kind of blown away by her background and her sense of adventure,” Hofer said. “This feels right.”

The concept of ocean rowing came to Pfendler a few years ago while she worked as a crew member on a private sailboat that plied the Mediterranean Sea. There, she met some rowers who were getting ready to head across the Atlantic.

“It just sat with me for a while — and then I couldn’t stop thinking about it,” Pfendler said.

Just over a year ago, she ventured onto the online platform of the race, then known as the Great Pacific Race. She met Hofer, 30, and Hofer’s 29-year-old sister, Jennifer, as well as Sierra Myers, 29, who went to school in Oregon with Jennifer.

The trio, seeking a fourth teammate, had interviewed nearly a half dozen candidates, a process they equated to speed-dating. When they met Pfendler, it didn’t take long to seal the deal.

“She is such a calm, capable and confident person,” Jennifer Hofer said. “We had to have her.”

But calmness and confidence are only a part of the equation, said British rower Roz Savage, who made history journeying solo across the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian oceans more than a decade ago.

“These women are going to be in an exhausting, scary, immensely challenging situation — battling sleep deprivation, doubt and fear,” said Savage, a speaker, author and candidate for the U.K. Parliament. “Even the best of friends can find it hard to be kind to each other with so much going on. Little things can blow up into big arguments.”

Hericane Rowing team members from left to right, Kristin Hofer, Sierra Myers, Kelsey Pfendler and Jen Hofer pull and push each other up a bike path along Vail Pass on a wooden cart they just built under the watchful eyes of trainer Scott Jones during a grueling sleep deprivation training exercise July 21, 2023. Team Hericane Rowing were training to row across the Pacific Ocean next year in the Great Pacific Race, attempting to beat the women's record of 34 days. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
Hericane Rowing team members from left to right, Kristin Hofer, Sierra Myers, Kelsey Pfendler and Jen Hofer pull and push each other up a bike path along Vail Pass on a wooden cart they built under the watchful eyes of trainer Scott Jones during a training exercise July 21, 2023. The women are preparing to row across the Pacific Ocean next year in the World’s Toughest Row, attempting to beat the women’s record of 34 days. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

“A lesson in being hungry for your goals”

That’s where Scott Jones comes in.

As the Colorado-based host of the “Athlete on Fire” podcast, he leans on his experience as a long-distance runner and ultra-marathoner to train and inspire others. In July, he put the women of Hericane Rowing through the ringer. It was only the second time the team had gathered in person.

“You’re going to be on a boat together for 30 to 40 days working your butts off,” he said in a recent interview with The Denver Post. “How do you relate to these people when you’re tired and physically and mentally out of it? If you can’t keep your cool, you can’t make good decisions. And if you can’t make decisions, bad (expletive) happens.”

Over four days, Jones subjected the foursome to a battery of challenges to test them not only on physical and mental skills but on their ability to manage sleep deprivation. Ocean rowers typically spend two hours in the cabin and two hours on the oars, rowing both in the blazing sun and under the cover of darkness, for days and nights on end.

Jones started the regimen by putting the team on rowing machines at a Centennial gym — setting the bar at 20,000 meters before they could come off. They bought food for their long weekend and took an icy plunge at Jones’ house in Bailey. Shortly after dropping into bed, exhausted, they were jostled awake and told to complete a 500-piece puzzle.

“The purpose was to make us as tired as possible — and then give us a bunch of unpredictable situations and find the cracks in the relationship,” Pfendler said.

The weekend continued with a 4:30 a.m. wakeup to trek 15 miles from Bailey to Guanella Pass. And then there was a trip to the Lowe’s in Silverthorne, where Jones instructed them to buy materials and construct a pushcart.

“They built a glorified dolly that didn’t really work,” Jones said.

On an evening hike to the top of a hill near Palisade, Myers began to experience discomfort in her ankles on the steep ascent. As progress slowed, tension built. But Pfendler largely kept her mounting frustration bottled up inside.

“I do not communicate well when I’m at my edge,” she conceded.

The next day meant multiple floats in a four-person raft on the Colorado River, with the women hauling the vessel back to the starting point 10 times. They ended up in Glenwood Springs, where Jones told them to hustle on the streets for money. He likened the effort to “old-school friggin’ panhandling” that would provide a valuable lesson “in being hungry for your goals.”

Fundraising, while not a part of physical training, is a necessary part of preparation. Participants have to pay a $25,000 entry fee and provide their own rowing boat. The Hofer sisters estimated the total expense of the race at close to $100,000.

While they are still raising money, Hericane Rowing has managed to land an angel investor who covered the $50,000 or so cost for a nearly decade-old Rannoch R-45 rowing boat. It will be shipped from the Netherlands to Los Angeles in December.

But even the most ferocious hunger for success can’t overcome what nature might serve up on the open water.

Brooke Downes was one of the four members of Lat35, the women’s team that set the record for the Pacific crossing in 2022. A professional rower who lives in Santa Barbara, California, she said those 34 days didn’t come easy.

A couple of weeks into the race, ocean conditions suddenly went limp. What had been progress of 70 miles a day on the oars slowed to 15 miles as the winds died and the ocean currents came to a seeming standstill.

The World’s Toughest Row organizers strictly prohibit an emergency engine or even the use of a sunshade, which could be jerry-rigged into a sail to help propel the boat.

With the water flat, tempers grew short. Downes, the lead navigator, became the target of some of that ire.

Helpless, the team decided to ease tensions by taking a break.

“On that fifth day of the stall, we decided to stop rowing and go swimming,” Downes said. “It brought spirits up.”

She credits the interpersonal skills she and her Lat35 teammates honed in the months leading up to the launch for getting them through that challenge.

“We had tons of things we called each other out on, and the key is to resolve it on land before you get out there,” Downes said. “If you see an issue, get it out of the way now. You don’t want it coming up in the middle of the ocean.”

Buena Vista resident and rafting guide for River Runners, Kelsey Pfendler, prepares her raft for a guided group trip down the Arkansas river in Buena Vista Aug. 10, 2023. Pfendler and three other women on team Hericane Rowing, are training to row across the Pacific Ocean next year in the Great Pacific Race, attempting to beat the women's record of 34 days. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
Buena Vista resident and rafting guide for River Runners, Kelsey Pfendler, prepares her raft for a guided group trip down the Arkansas river in Buena Vista Aug. 10, 2023. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

Two hours on, two hours off

That’s easier said than done when living in a cramped space with three others, traveling through four time zones under blistering sun, driving rain and ink-black nights — and across often-churning seas, Downes said.

Sleep is always in short supply, continually disrupted by the two-hours-on, two-off schedule. That, more than anything, Downes said, can do a number on team members’ moods and on the collective disposition on the boat.

“The body does adapt a bit to the pattern, but you always want to sleep more,” she said. “You have to be lying down when you get dressed, so it’s really easy to fall back asleep.”

Sleep shifts are done in cabins at each end of the boat, enclosures that also provide storage for rain gear, clothes, sleeping bags and electronics. It’s the only place on the boat where a team member can get respite from the elements outside.

While sleep is the top priority, other things must get accomplished when a rower is off the oars.

Primary among those: making meals and connecting to land via satellite phone for weather updates or guidance on navigation. Meals are dehydrated offerings that come in a surprisingly wide range of flavors and cuisines, from mac and cheese to beef stroganoff to pad thai. For Downes and her Lat35 teammates, it was necessary to down 6,000 calories a day.

“If you’re skipping a meal, that’s bad,” she said.

Race rules require that each boat carry 55 days of dry meals, accounting for the most weight on the boat aside from the rowers themselves. Drinking water comes from the ocean, made safe for consumption by a solar-powered desalination system.

Bathroom activity is done on deck, in the open, using the time-tested “bucket and chuck it” method.

“You don’t want to risk anything tipping over in the cabin,” Downes said.

Music and audiobooks can allay the inevitable boredom that comes with rowing for hours and days on end. Downes said country, rap, pop and reggae filled their days and nights.

Because of the inherent danger of ocean rowing, the World’s Toughest Row requires safety devices and equipment onboard, including emergency beacons, satellite phones, a handheld GPS and VHF radio, a solar panel and an open ocean life raft. Any time team members are on deck, they must attach themselves to the boat by harness and tether.

If the very worst goes down, each boat has a ditch bag filled with emergency water and rations, communication and signaling equipment, and a medical kit.

And while an emergency boat covers the basic footprint of the race, it could take a day or two to reach a vessel in distress. That’s how Downes found herself repairing the automatic tiller arm on Lat35’s boat two times in three weeks, with no help from the outside.

Buena Vista resident and rafting guide for River Runners, Kelsey Pfendler, fifth from left, floats down the Arkansas river with a group near Buena Vista August 10, 2023. Pfendler and three other women on team Hericane Rowing, are training to row across the Pacific Ocean next year in the Great Pacific Race, attempting to beat the women's record of 34 days. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
Buena Vista resident and rafting guide for River Runners, Kelsey Pfendler, fifth from left, floats down the Arkansas river with a group near Buena Vista August 10, 2023. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

Near-disaster on the Atlantic

Fight Oar Die’s Stratton said that once the shoreline fades into the mist, there’s only one certainty for a rowing team: “Things can and will go wrong.”

They did for the Fight Oar Die team of four American military veterans that crossed the Atlantic last year, with Stratton as their weather router. When they hit heavy seas on Dec. 28, things didn’t just go sideways — they went literally upside down. Waves were churning 30 feet high while winds were roaring at 30 knots.

At 3:30 a.m., in pitch black, the men were hit by a gust that they describe on the Inverted in the Atlantic website as akin to being struck by “a freight train.”

“They’re on top of a wave when a massive gust of wind came through and flipped them upside down,” Stratton said.

Thus began 18 hours of setbacks and bouts of bad luck on the high seas that nearly ended in the drowning of the entire team. The two rowers who had been tossed into the ocean tried to right the boat, but to no avail. A life raft was deployed and the men grabbed their emergency communication equipment.

Their satellite phone, soaked to the electronic guts, proved useless. And the beacons, which still worked, sent a signal that was never acted on by officials in Cape Verde, according to their website. Fifteen hours into the ordeal, and fast running out of time and options, the team made contact by VHF radio with a cargo ship that was sailing to Montreal. It was 15 nautical miles away.

“The fact that they got a ship in these conditions is unheard of,” Stratton said.

Eventually, they found each other. By rope ladder, each man climbed from the raft, which had been punctured amid the chaos, to the deck of the Hanze Goteborg. They spent the next 13 days sailing to Canada.

“They probably had a few hours left before the life raft would have sunk,” Stratton said. “The team did everything right but that’s the risk of ocean rowing — that some things can go wrong that are out of your control.”

Hericane Rowing will be using a boat that has made a couple of Atlantic crossings. Dubbed “Rose,” it was the rowing boat for The Dutch Atlantic Four, the team that won the Talisker Whisky Atlantic Challenge in 2018.

Marcel Ates, that team’s captain, gives the boat high marks and says if Hericane Rowing follows safety protocols, the journey should be safe.

“In my belief, the R45 is the best and fastest rowing boat for a 3 to 4-man crew,” he said. “Safety comes with the crew. As long as you keep safety as a standard — always, and I mean always, stay connected to the boat with your lifelines. Even in moments of no wind and no waves … Rules like this make ocean rowing safe.”

Pfendler said her approach is to learn everything about Rose in the next nine months.

“I’m trying to learn everything about that boat and what can go wrong so that I don’t have to learn how to fix it — I can fix it,” she said.

Buena Vista resident and rafting guide for River Runners, Kelsey Pfendler, bottom raft, back right, with a group a guided trip down the Arkansas river near Buena Vista August 10, 2023. Pfendler and three other women on team Hericane Rowing, are training to row across the Pacific Ocean next year in the Great Pacific Race, attempting to beat the women's record of 34 days. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
Buena Vista resident and rafting guide for River Runners, Kelsey Pfendler, bottom raft, back right, with a group a guided trip down the Arkansas river near Buena Vista August 10, 2023. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

“Sometimes you get lucky, sometimes you don’t”

But knowing one’s vessel inside and out doesn’t remove the risk of an ocean row. Savage, the British rower who in 2008 tackled the same general route Hericane Rowing will attempt next year, said weather is always the predominant arbiter on the water.

“It’s not the ocean that makes conditions difficult, it’s the weather. And weather changes all the time,” she said. “Sometimes you get lucky, sometimes you don’t.”

For Hericane Rowing, Savage said, the biggest challenge will likely come at the start.

“The hardest part of getting from California to Hawaii is getting away from the California coast,” she said. “The prevailing winds are onshore, blowing the rower back towards the shoreline. Winds and currents pushed me a long way south (to nearly level with Mexico) before I could make much progress west.”

But once in progress, the payoff of an ocean row is singularly rich, Downes said. Lat35 watched whales and tuna swim past them, though no sharks. (And too much plastic waste.) The view of the heavens at night is unlike anything a person can get on land.

“So many stars — it was like that every night,” Downes said. “The sunrises and sunsets were insane.”

The reward for the four women of Hericane Rowing for making — and especially completing — the journey will “probably be the most amazing experience” they will ever have, Savage said.

“I believe we’re all capable of far more than we think we are,” she said. “Playing small just gives us an excuse not to be all that we can be — to leave it to others, to pretend that we don’t have the power or the courage to do something really special with our lives.”

Pfendler doesn’t play small, even if she stands 5-foot-3 and weighs 130 pounds. Her arms are visibly muscled.

She works mostly with men in the guide industry and admits that “everything is harder when the person next to you is 8 inches taller.”

But not so hard that it dissuades her from trying.

Pfendler cut out the roof of her Vanagon and installed a shell for more space. She keeps a 3-inch-thick repair manual for the van within easy reach. She just changed out the timing belt and water pump. Next task: re-doing the suspension on the 39-year-old vehicle.

“I just force things to happen,” Pfendler said. “All life is, is convincing people you can do something.”

That includes convincing her three teammates that they made the right choice when they picked her as the fourth member last year.

Though that may have been the easy part of it all. Convincing the ocean to believe in her and the rest of Hericane Rowing next June is the far more demanding task ahead. Pfendler says this is where her respect for the ocean, and the age-old power it holds beneath its undulating surface, will be crucial.

“If you approach with respect and reverence, it has more compassion for you,” she said. “If you respect the hell out of it, usually it lets you pass.”

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5801064 2023-10-19T10:32:32+00:00 2023-10-19T16:30:49+00:00
Small town Lyons offers big payoff for visitors https://www.denverpost.com/2023/08/29/lyons-colorado-events-festivals-things-to-do/ Tue, 29 Aug 2023 12:00:31 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5616183 You have to zoom in pretty close on a map of Colorado before Lyons even shows up. The town, with a population that hovers around 2,000 people, isn’t exactly a tourist hot spot or an epicenter of, well, anything. But we know better.

We know that Lyons is worthy of a stop on our way to Rocky Mountain National Park, or as a destination on its own. We know that 97% of the 85 businesses are locally owned (the only ones that aren’t are two gas stations), making it one of the most unique towns in which to browse, eat and drink. We know that its setting at the edge of the Rockies, with its mix of forests, valleys and sandstone cliffs, is absolutely stunning. And we know that come summertime the music is roaring, with major festivals drawing bluegrass-loving crowds.

Here are five reasons to spend time in Lyons this summer:

The food is some of the best in the state

It may seem strange that one of the most delicious fine dining restaurants in Colorado resides in such a small town, but hey, we don’t make the rules. Marigold is a beautiful, unexpected restaurant serving beautiful, unexpected food, and it alone is worth the drive.

The menu is a constantly changing mix of European/new American dishes that is pretty much whatever chef/owner Theo Adley fancies that day. At this point it’s almost unnecessary to say that a restaurant plucks its produce and meat from local farms and ranches, and it’s the flavor combinations and techniques that make Marigold, which opened last summer, so notable.

Marigold, a restaurant created by owner/chef Theo Adley, features a constantly changing mix of European/new American dishes. (Provided by Town of Lyons)
Marigold, a restaurant created by owner/chef Theo Adley, features a constantly changing mix of European/new American dishes. (Provided by Town of Lyons)

Take the staple Caesar salad, a deceptively simple title for what is actually a hand-held take on the classic. We get two chunks of little gem lettuce topped with the familiar dressing, but large bonito flakes stand in for anchovies and crunchy puffed rice for croutons. The three pastas are handmade and extruded each day. (If the bucatini with prawns, lobster stock, white wine and chile crisp is on the menu, order it.) Of the proteins, the half chicken under a brick with yogurt and herb-packed salsa verde is always available, along with usually something else from the land and something from the sea.

And the drinks aren’t so bad either

Oskar Blues put Lyons on the national beer map in 2002 when it decided to pour its craft brews into aluminum cans instead of glass bottles. Popping the top of a crushable red-white-and-blue can is almost a Colorado rite of passage, and the original brewpub still stands on Main Street in the center of town. But there’s more to sip in Lyons than Dale’s Pale Ale.

When you likely first enter Lyons driving west on Colorado 36, you’ll see an Old West-style distillery advertising “Whisky From Colorful Colorado.” But there is so much more than whiskey at Spirit Hound Distillers. This ace distillery also makes small batch gin, rum, vodka, moonshine, sambuca and coffee- and chocolate-flavored liqueurs. You’ll want to take home a bottle of course (or five; we know life ain’t easy), but you should also stick around for a cocktail.

The lengthy menu features tasty blends made with Spirit Hounds booze, like the Call the Sheriff with gin, house amaro, orange liqueur, a tart cherry infusion and orange peel bitters. Or the Robert Burns, whose mix of cask-strength whiskey, vermouth, cacao bitters and walnut extract is so strong that you’re limited to just one. These cocktails are reason enough to book an overnight stay at a nearby Airbnb.

Customers take in the drinks and atmosphere at Spirit Hound Distillers in Lyons, which makes small batch whiskey, gin, rum, vodka, moonshine and more. (Provided by Town of Lyons)
Customers take in the drinks and atmosphere at Spirit Hound Distillers in Lyons, which makes small batch whiskey, gin, rum, vodka, moonshine and more. (Provided by Town of Lyons)

The concerts and festivals in Lyons are legendary

You don’t have to be a bluegrass lover — although it helps — to enjoy the town’s music festivals. July’s RockyGrass sells out quickly, as does August’s Rocky Mountain Folks Festival. The lineups are always stellar, but the experience of camping out on Planet Bluegrass’s on-site campground along North St. Vrain Creek with thousands of fellow music lovers is hard to beat. For bluegrass fans, attending a Lyons fest is pretty much their twangy version of a pilgrimage to Mecca, and the energy is fun. (And, as a warning, nonstop.)

If not showering for three days isn’t your bag, Lyons’ Sandstone Park hosts a weekly summer concert series on Wednesday nights. The acts vary in style (i.e., it’s not all banjos and mandolins), but it’s back to bluegrass for Oskar Blues’ year-round Tuesday night jam sessions. Other spots around town, like MainStage Brewing Co., also regularly host performers.

There’s fun on the water for anglers (and would-be anglers)

Especially in summer, the North, Middle and South St. Vrain creeks are prime fly-fishing spots, teeming with more cutthroat, brook, brown and rainbow trout than you can shake a pole at. (Unless you don’t catch anything, in which case there are clearly no trout in these creeks.)

While you can fish in Lyons year-round, spring runoff can be pretty high, and the weather is just more pleasant in summer. All three creeks get their start near Rocky Mountain National Park and the Indian Peaks Wilderness and wind their way down to Lyons. You can access the South St. Vrain (and where it joins the North) from Lyons’ Bohn Park right in town.

If you’d rather float the creek than put in the pesky work of fishing it, tubing is popular. You can rent single or double tubes, life jackets, river shoes and dry bags at LaVern Johnson Park. The tubing season starts in May, but the water moves pretty quickly. Head out in late June through early August for a calmer ride.

And finally, Lyons isn’t bad to look at

Bikes lean against a post near one of many paths and trails in and around Lyons. (Provided by Town of Lyons)
Bikes lean against a post near one of the many paths and trails in and around Lyons. (Provided by Town of Lyons)

Whether by foot or wheels, the outdoor offerings are pretty darn stunning. Miles of hiking trails will have you trekking through pine forests, 1880s homesteads, grasslands, unique rock formations, impressive valleys and even an elk migration corridor. Check out the paths of Heil Valley Ranch, Lion Gulch Trail and Hall Ranch for spectacular scenery.

On two wheels, you can road bike the Peak-to-Peak Scenic Byway or take on the 40-mile Rocky Mountain Ascent into Estes Park and up Trail Ridge Road. Mountain bikers can hit many of the same trailheads as hikers, with the Heil Valley Ranch/Hall Ranch 33-mile, 3,800-foot-climb Heil to Picture to Hall and Back combo being especially challenging — and rewarding.

Or you can skip all the work and enjoy the views from pretty much anywhere in Lyons, maybe relaxing after a great meal or recovering from all the hard work of thinking about hiking and biking. However you enjoy Lyons, it’s a town worth knowing.

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5616183 2023-08-29T06:00:31+00:00 2023-08-28T15:41:38+00:00
Extra water will ensure good rafting on Colorado’s busiest river through Labor Day weekend https://www.denverpost.com/2023/08/18/arkansas-river-rafting-colorado-continues-through-labor-day-2023/ Fri, 18 Aug 2023 12:00:07 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5759180 An already excellent year for rafting conditions on the Arkansas River is receiving a boost to its flow levels through Labor Day, ensuring outfitters on Colorado’s leading whitewater river will have sufficient flows to operate through the holiday weekend.

Because the water level must be drawn down at the Twin Lakes Reservoir to enable repairs on a power plant there, flows downstream through the Arkansas Headwaters Recreation Area will be augmented, according to Bob Hamel, executive director of the Arkansas River Outfitters Association. The Arkansas is far and away the rafting river in Colorado, accounting for nearly 248,000 user days in 2022, more than 45% of the state’s total number.

It has been a good year for rafting already thanks to an above-average Colorado snowpack, a cool wet spring that kept runoff gradual and steady, frequent rain in early summer and now the monsoon. The added flow from the drawdown at Twin Lakes will be a boon for rafters.

“We have some supplemental flows because of this movement of water for the repairs coming up,” Hamel said. “The season is going to extend through Labor Day. They are adequate flows, fun levels, compared to anywhere else in the state.”

Rafting will continue on the Cache la Poudre River in northern Colorado through Labor Day with water levels above normal for this time of year.

“We’re definitely in our low-water season,” said Kevin Schuster, the river manager for Rocky Mountain Adventures, which operates on the Poudre. “It’s more technical rafting. It’s still splashy out there, but it’s not the hard-hitting waves you see in spring runoff. It’s kind of getting around rocks and things of that nature.”

Rafting will continue on the Colorado River beyond Labor Day, according to David Costlow, executive director of the statewide Colorado River Outfitters Association.

“The Colorado will flow fine all the way from Kremmling to the Utah border,” Costlow said. “There will be outfitters there probably going into October.” Costlow estimated that Colorado rafting lasts through Labor Day roughly three out of 10 years. “When you make it to Labor Day, you’re feeling pretty good,” he said. “Not every year do you make it. This year they’ll make it.”

Hamel said conditions have been good all summer, but visitor numbers may be down this year compared to recent years.

“We’re all quite aware that the bump we got from COVID was through the roof,” Hamel said. “It was incredible. (Outfitters) turned away thousands of people in the COVID years. I think we’ll be down a little bit, but kind of average, maybe a little bit below.”

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter, The Adventurist, to get outdoors news sent straight to your inbox.

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5759180 2023-08-18T06:00:07+00:00 2023-08-18T07:00:26+00:00
5 serene Colorado lakes to explore with your paddleboard https://www.denverpost.com/2023/07/13/colorado-lakes-for-paddleboarding/ Thu, 13 Jul 2023 12:00:13 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5615984 When it comes to watersports, nothing matches the serenity – or scenery – of gliding across a mountain lake on a stand-up paddleboard.

On some Colorado lakes and reservoirs, stand-up paddleboarding is confined to a specific, relatively small area. However, there are several liquid oases where you can capture the full panorama of the surrounding peaks, forests and shores, and explore to your heart’s content.

Here are some of our favorites.

Grand Lake

The largest and deepest natural water source in Colorado, Grand Lake measures 515 surface acres and is 265 feet at its deepest point. The shoreline measures 4.5 miles and because it’s connected to the neighboring and even more expansive Shadow Mountain Reservoir (accessed through a narrow passage that’s ideal for SUPs), the opportunities for exploration are bountiful. Considering its proximity to the west entrance of Rocky Mountain National Park, the lake is also surprisingly uncrowded.

With the dark green presence of Shadow Mountain looming on the southern shoreline, the aroma of pine trees is ever-present across the water, which is smoothest and most manageable in the morning.

The lake is bordered on one side by Grand Lake’s historic downtown, featuring picturesque old saloons, restaurants, boutique shops and ice cream parlors.

As you paddle along the western shoreline of Grand Lake and around Point Park (the start of the channel that leads to Shadow Mountain Lake, including a passage under Jerico Road) you’ll come across a colorful array of lakeside residences, varying from historic cabins to mansions. (Actor Tim Allen is said to own a home here.)

Need to know: Personal flotation devices are required for all individuals (even dogs) on paddleboards. Check the wind direction and start your paddle into the wind to make the return trip less taxing. The lake often gets choppy in the afternoon.

Parking: Grand Lake Marina is your best bet. There’s also Arapaho National Recreation Area, a large parking lot on the Shadow Mountain Lake side of the water with quick, easy access for visitors with their own paddleboards.

Gear rentals: Paddleboard rentals, including paddle and PFD, are available at Rocky Mountain SUP (dogs allowed) starting at $30 for one hour or at the marina (no dogs allowed) starting at $26 for one hour.

Paddleboarders are free to explore the entirety of Lake Dillon near Frisco. Take a picnic and find a remote slice of sand on an island or a quiet cove. The water typically is smooth and inviting in the mornings. Keep an eye on the forecast and beware of summer's afternoon storms. (Meredith Guinan, Special to The Denver Post)
Paddleboarders are free to explore the entirety of Lake Dillon (Dillon Reservoir) near Frisco. Take a picnic and find a remote slice of sand on an island or a quiet cove. The water typically is smooth and inviting in the mornings. Keep an eye on the forecast and beware of summer’s afternoon storms. (Photo by Meredith Guinan/Special to The Denver Post)

Lake Dillon

Views of the majestic Ten Mile Range, especially the triangular Peak One scarred by an enormous avalanche path, don’t get better than from the middle of this expansive reservoir between Frisco and Dillon. Although parking areas around the lake fill up and both the Frisco Bay and Dillon Marinas get busy, especially on weekends in July and August, you can find plenty of areas to spread out on this body of water.

Because Lake Dillon serves as Denver’s drinking water, speed boats and motorized personal watercraft (as well as swimming) are prohibited.

Although there are always a few pontoon boats chugging across the main corridor and a fair share of sailboats around the lake, kayakers and paddleboarders can venture where they please. Take a picnic and find a remote slice of sand on an island (there are more than a dozen) or a quiet piece of shoreline to spend an hour or two relaxing in the sunshine.

Keep an eye on the forecast, however, as winds can pick up mid-day and thunderstorms often roll in during summer afternoons. The early morning is when the water surface is typically its glassiest and most inviting.

Need to know: Personal flotation devices are mandatory for every individual on Lake Dillon. Summit County sheriff’s deputies patrol the water by boat daily in summer and will stop you and most likely issue a steep fine if you don’t have a PFD on your body or at least strapped to your board. Because the water is frigid (typically around 50 degrees all summer) and hypothermia sets in quickly, it’s smart to actually wear one.

Parking: In addition to the Dillon and Frisco Bay marinas, there are numerous put-in areas around the lake, including from the handful of shoreside campgrounds and parking lots. For $8, reliable parking and smooth lake access is available at the Giberson Bay Day Use lot.

Gear rentals: Paddleboards, including paddles and PFDs, are available at the Frisco Bay Marina starting at $51 for 2 hours. (Book early for a discount and to ensure you get one.) In Dillon rentals start at $60 at Stand Up Paddle.

You have to hike a little ways to get to Meridian/Long Lake, but you'll appreciate the peaceful that you find once you arrive. Just find a spot to plop your picnic along the 2 miles of shoreline and put in for a relaxing paddle. (Meredith Guinan, Special to The Denver Post)
You have to hike a little ways to get to Meridian/Long Lake, but you’ll appreciate the peaceful that you find once you arrive. Just find a spot to plop your picnic along the 2 miles of shoreline and put in for a relaxing paddle. (Photo by Meredith Guinan/Special to The Denver Post)

Meridian/Long Lake

This narrow body of water near Crested Butte is a bit of a locals’ secret and it takes some effort (of the cardiovascular variety) to reach.

After a short drive and a walk on a dirt road you’ll emerge from the thick pine forest to find yourself in a lush meadow of wildflowers lining this stunningly turquoise, knife-shaped lake. You can picnic and put in wherever you find a spot along the 2 miles of shoreline (without crushing wildflowers or sensitive soil, of course). Other than the few clusters of fellow swimmers and SUPers, you’ll feel like you’ve entered a private paradise.

Need to know: This area is surrounded by private land and residences, so abide all signs and stay on roads and trails.

Getting there/Parking: From the town of Crested Butte, take Gothic Road (Route 135) north 1.75 miles. Turn left onto Washington Gulch Road (County Road 811) and drive 1.5 miles. Park in front of the tennis courts on the right side. Walk across the dam and past the private lake on your right. Follow the road around to the left and head through the gate. Follow the gravel road up around one switchback and down to the lake. There are no real beaches around the lake, but there are a few flattish dirt areas. Just pick a place to put in – and be sure to pack out all trash.

Gear rentals: Paddleboard packages (4 hours) start at $47 at Wheelies and Waves in Crested Butte.

Carter Lake near Loveland is a favorite for people exploring and relaxing on paddleboards, kayaks and canoes. The warmest and smoothest areas to paddle are near the shore. There are campsites perfect for making a weekend of your adventure. The lake is teeming with walleye, trout and largemouth bass, too. (Provided by Visit Loveland)
Carter Lake near Loveland is a favorite for people exploring and relaxing on paddleboards, kayaks and canoes. The warmest and smoothest areas to paddle are near the shore. There are campsites perfect for making a weekend of your adventure. The lake is teeming with walleye, trout and largemouth bass, too. (Photo provided by Visit Loveland)

Carter Lake

Home to an absolute smorgasbord of lakes, Loveland is a water lover’s hotbed. Lying 15 miles southwest of the historic downtown, Carter Lake is arguably the area’s most spectacular offering.

Three miles long and about 1 mile wide, the 1,100-acre reservoir is surrounded by 1,000 acres of public land that includes numerous camping spots overlooking the lake. The water is teeming with walleye, trout and largemouth bass. From your board, it’s not unusual to see fish splashing through the surface.

The lake is a go-to spot for sailing, water skiing, swimming and even scuba diving. A day use entrance fee of $10 per vehicle is required. Paddleboards can be used in any part of the lake besides the marina, but the warmest and smoothest areas to paddle are closest to the shore. The swim beach is a great starting point, as the serenity of the ever-growing quiet is delightful as you pull away to your own piece of shoreline.

Need to know: Paddlers are required to have a PFD at all times. Fast-moving motorboats frequent the middle of the lake, so it’s safest to stay close to the shore.

Getting there/Parking: The Carter Lake swim beach is located at Dam 2, past the marina between the Big Thompson and Sky View campgrounds, and includes restrooms. There is a $10 entrance fee per vehicle.

Gear rentals: What’s SUP is located at the south shore behind the boat dock. Rentals (including PFD and paddle) start at $25 for one hour.

Horsetooth Reservoir

Named after the snaggled rock formation that overlooks the lake, Horsetooth Reservoir lies less than 20 minutes from Old Town Fort Collins. This large (6.5-mile-long) stretch of liquid paradise is the region’s epicenter for outdoor recreation. In addition to swimming, boating and paddlesports, people while away summer weekends hiking and biking on the miles of trails surrounding the water, as well as rock climbing and horse riding.

The best place to paddleboard (also the location of the rental shop) is at the north end of the lake at Satanka Cove. From here you can push off into the still, glassy expanse and glide around the clove-shaped reaches of the cove. Lush with lime green vegetation set off against red rocks and sand, the colors are otherworldly. Chances are, you’ll mostly have it to yourself. Early morning is the most magical time to paddle here.

Need to know: Although Horsetooth warms up in late summer, the water is deep in places and a PFD is required on your board at all times.

Getting there/parking: Park at Satanka Cove. A $9 day pass is required and can be purchased at the pay machine in the parking lot.

Gear rentals: What’s SUP is located at Satanka Cove. Rentals (including PFD and paddle) start at $25 for one hour.

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter, The Adventurist, to get outdoors news sent straight to your inbox.

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5615984 2023-07-13T06:00:13+00:00 2023-07-13T06:03:32+00:00
Swimming at Chatfield State Park gets all clear, still closed at Cherry Creek due to E. coli https://www.denverpost.com/2023/07/07/e-coli-closes-swimming-cherry-creek-state-park/ Fri, 07 Jul 2023 20:06:42 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5723149 Swimming at Chatfield State Park has been reopened but remains closed at Cherry Creek State Park due to elevated E. coli levels in the water.

Park employees have put up signs at the park entrances, along the beach at and other areas at Cherry Creek to let people know. Colorado Parks and Wildlife employees said routine water-quality testing Thursday showed that levels of the bacteria at both parks were above levels considered safe by state health officials.

But CPW spokeswoman Kara Van Hoose said that swimming resumed at Chatfield after water samples collected and tested Friday passed Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment standards.

The public can monitor conditions at the parks through their websites and CPW Northeast Region Twitter account will announce when Cherry Creek’s swim area will reopen.

“While these closures are not common, we test the water often to make sure the public is safe while enjoying the reservoir,” said Cherry Creek State Park Operations Manager Larry Butterfield said in a statement.

Butterfield said the high bacteria levels can be caused by fecal waste from wildlife, run-off from urban areas, or excessive run-off from rain. The park has received heavy rainfall this year.

Although the area is closed to swimming, beach access and other water-related activities, like fishing and paddle boarding, are allowed.

CPW notified the CDPHE and the Environment and the Jefferson County Health Department of the test results.

 

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5723149 2023-07-07T14:06:42+00:00 2023-07-07T14:06:42+00:00