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USAOnTheFly.com has accepted an invitation to join forces with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Fisheries & Habitat Conservation
Div. of Environmental Quality, Branch of Invasive Species program.

 
 
Article 2:
 
By DAVE BUCHANAN
The Daily Sentinel

When Carol teaches, people listen.
That’s important, but it’s only a part of the reason why Grand Junction resident Carol Oglesby recently was honored with the Federation of Fly Fisher’s “Woman of the Year” award at the Federation’s annual conclave in Bozeman, Mont.
The award is one of the “Big Three” given out each year by the FFF, along with the Man of the Year and the Buzz Buszek Award, given to someone in the fly-tying end of the sport.
Among the past recipients of Woman of the Year honored are such illustrious fly fishers as Joan Wulff, Joan Whitlock, Maggie Merriman and Rhea Topping. The criteria in part require “outstanding contributions” that benefit the Federation on a national or international level.
Oglesby has succeeded on both levels, but she’ll be the last to admit it. Even when she heard rumors she had been nominated for the award, she wasn’t ready to believe them.
“Brad Befus (a Montrose fly-fishing innovator, lecturer and author) called me and told me I had been nominated and I thought, ‘Yeah, right, like that’s going to happen,’ ” Carol recalled in her unassuming manner. “I told Pat, ‘You do everything you can to discourage it.’ ”
Pat is Pat Oglesby, Carol’s husband of 33 years and himself well-known in local and national fly-fishing circles.
Theirs is a yin/yang relationship. Pat’s interests tend toward conservation and working to enhance habitat and restore native trout, Carol’s into teaching and introducing people, particularly women and children, to the beauties of fly fishing and the natural world in which it takes place.
Pat usually doesn’t argue with Carol, but this one time, her near-constant fishing companion somehow forgot to obey.
Long-time friend BJ Lester of Grand Junction said Carol’s attitude is indicative of her role in fly fishing.
“Carol kept saying, ‘I don’t deserve this,’ and later on I started thinking. ‘Why did they choose Carol?’ ” Lester said. “The things I see, Joan Wulff made her mark by being the premier caster and all that. Carol, though, isn’t premier in just one thing; she does a lot of stuff for the federation, things the federation finds important.
“She doesn’t think it’s quite as important, but look at all she does.”
Here are a few things: Carol is a life member (and certified casting instructor ) of the Federation of Fly Fishers and Trout Unlimited, is a regular contributing editor to the “Women’s Outlook” section in the federation magazine, The Flyfisher, and along with Leslie Dal Lago of Idaho Falls, Idaho, co-founded and co-chaired the FFF women’s program.
She also teaches at local seminars and gatherings as well as the federation’s annual National Conclave, is active with Colorado Women Flyfishers, volunteers with the Colorado Division of Wildlife in its “Women in the Outdoors” program, and organized the Women’s Fly-fishing Workshop at the Western Colorado Fly Fishing Exposition in Grand Junction, which now is in its eighth year and attracts upwards of 175 fly-tiers and speakers and is the largest fly-fishing expo between Denver and Salt Lake City.
All this from a woman who as a girl did not like fishing.
“I was a squeamish little girl and when I went fishing with my folks, it was the last resort,” Carol recounted with a laugh. “I got involved because Pat was so interested. We took a class together and I just enjoyed it so much. The first time I went out I caught a fish, and that was a big thrill.”
The basic angling pedagogical scheme says that if a beginner catches a fish, the angler is hooked forever.
Carol realizes this and loves it when her students catch fish, but she’s reluctant to make simply catching a fish the centerpiece of fly fishing.
“It’s sad when women don’t catch fish, but we don’t emphasize that, it’s just a piece of the whole experience,” Carol said. “Fly fishing is about more, it’s about the environment and being outdoors and being with people you like.”
And quite suddenly we’ve entered the realm of Mars and Venus go fishing.
Men and women tend to look for and expect different things from their fishing experiences, something to which any woman can attest, particularly if she’s shared (or been subjected to) a day of fishing with her significant other.
“We (women) talk the same language,” Carol said, laughing. “I’m also finding more single women want something to do that they can be involved in on their own and doesn’t even need a partner.”
Carol, the Mesa County office administrator for the facilities and parks department, along with BJ Lester and a large handful of other local women fly fishers, belongs to a loose-knit group that fishes together and supplies that social network women find important.
“Sometimes we just enjoy the solitude of fishing, but there’s that network of women so that when a woman wants to go fish, it gives them a name they can call,” Carol said. “It’s not just fishing and catching fish but the whole social outlook, of being with other women who also love to fly fish and enjoy being outdoors.”
But it’s Carol as the teacher that brings and keeps women in fly fishing, Lester said.
“We met at the International Women’s Fly-fishing Festival (in San Francisco in 1966) and before it was over she roped me into getting involved in fly fishing and teaching,” Lester said. “I would say she and I cast equally well but every time I watch her teach, I come away with something on A, how to teach and B, how to do it.
“She understands people and she listens, that’s the key. She really cares about the end result.”
Well, in the end, most anglers would prefer to be fishing, and Carol’s no different. She’s chased trout all across the West, caught carp as long as your arm in the San Luis Valley, and had saltwater adventures with bonefish, bluefin tuna, barracuda, snook and a host of other bluewater species.
But her favorite places are those challenging, small mountain streams where little fish grow big attitudes.
“I like the solitude of the small streams and the fish think they are monsters,” Carol said. “Small streams can be a little more technical, more of challenge than nymphing a big river.”
Challenge, that’s a good word. The challenge of teaching well, of fly fishing well, of conveying the message that fly fishing is more than catching fish.
Teacher always knows best.

 

New Zealand Mudsnails are now in two River systems in Colorado. They may be in other river systems and we don't know it. Don't take a chance in spreading them to other river systems.
http://www.westdenvertu.org/snails.htm

The world has changed. We are very mobile and dragging bad things around the world. We need to change our paridigm of when to clean our equipment.

Are you helping prevent the spread or are you part of the problem?

RIFLE, Colo. -- Outdoors guide Keith Goddard remembers when he could go for hours or even days and not see another person on top of western Colorado's Roan Plateau.

"Up until a few years ago, you could stand right here all day long, and if you'd seen one or two vehicles, you'd seen a bunch," Goddard said, peering from a field of wildflowers to rocky, wooded slopes below.

As he spoke, three 18-wheelers sped by in a noisy reminder of the natural gas boom many expect to get even bigger in this stretch of land 180 miles west of Denver. It is prized by both energy companies and by people like Goddard, a 42-year-old member of the so-called "hook and bullet" crowd that is wielding more and more clout when it comes to managing public land -- clout that's being noticed by industry officials and politicians on both sides of the aisle.

Fearing that energy development sweeping through the Rockies could permanently scar the landscape, hunters and anglers are forming alliances with environmental groups such as The Wilderness Society and Sierra Club. The two sides, who have sparred in the past, are trying to protect such areas as northern Montana's Rocky Mountain Front, Wyoming's Jack Morrow Hills and New Mexico's Valle Vidal.

Standing on the Roan, where there are already 30 natural gas wells on private land, Goddard said he doesn't want his favorite hunting ground developed, but sees it as inevitable. He said he just hopes the impact is minimized and drilling is banned in the most wild and environmentally sensitive areas.

"If they do it heavy-scale and take a shotgun approach on the Roan and it's real tight density and spacing, it will put us out of business and it will disperse the deer and elk herds," Goddard said.

The two sides tangle

The Roan Plateau, which straddles two Colorado counties, generates an estimated $5 million a year for the local economy from hunting, fishing and wildlife watching, according to the Colorado Division of Wildlife.

It could also provide enough natural gas for 4 million homes for the next 20 years, according to the Colorado Oil and Gas Association trade group. Canadian-based Encana Corp. and Tulsa, Okla.-based Williams Cos. are among the companies drilling on private land on the plateau.

Trout Unlimited, a group historically focused on the nation's trout and salmon fisheries, recently toured the plateau before the Bureau of Land Management releases its final environmental impact statement -- in essence, the management options -- for drilling public land in the area. That report is expected next month.

"For the last three years, we've been organizing hunters and anglers all over the West on energy-related issues because there's just been an unprecedented amount of gas and oil development going on all over the West in some of our last remaining wild places," said David Stalling, Trout Unlimited's Western field coordinator based in Missoula, Mont.

The efforts have been noticed. At a recent energy forum in Denver, Ken Wonstolen of the oil and gas association called the alliance of outdoors groups and environmentalists an effective marriage of convenience.

"It's something we have to address very seriously," Wonstolen said.

Politicians have noticed, too.

Bill Ritter, the Democratic gubernatorial candidate in Colorado, has sent letters to sportsmen, pledging to be a good steward of public lands. His Republican opponent, Rep. Bob Beauprez, has also met with hunting and fishing groups.

Sen. Conrad Burns, R-Mont., locked in a tight re-election race, has introduced legislation to ban new oil and gas drilling on federal land along the Rocky Mountain Front.

In June, Republican Rep. Heather Wilson of New Mexico co-sponsored a bill prohibiting energy development in the Valle Vidal in northern New Mexico after her Democratic challenger signed a pledge opposing drilling. In Wyoming, Republican Sen. Craig Thomas joined Democratic Gov. Dave Freudenthal last year to successfully protest proposed oil and gas leases in the national forests.

This kind of bipartisan opposition in the West helped scuttle a plan by the Bush administration to sell 300,000 acres of national forest, said Daniel Kemmis, a senior fellow at the Center for the Rocky Mountain West at the University of Montana.

"That was as stillborn a proposal as you could find, in large part because so many Western Republicans opposed it," Kemmis said. "They saw these broad-based coalitions that are now just too politically potent to ignore."

Herding together

Alliances among environmentalists, loggers, ranchers and hunters have evolved as environmental groups realized they needed local support, Kemmis said. He said he believes more industries will follow timber companies in working with grass-roots activists.

More than 25 Colorado groups ranging from the Colorado Environmental Coalition to the Colorado Bowhunters Association have written guidelines they believe would minimize drilling's impacts on wildlife and habitat.

Bob Elderkin, a retired BLM employee and hunter who helped draft the proposals, said circulating the guidelines in an election season was intentional.

"When our elected officials start realizing there's a large united bloc of the voting public that's serious about this, then they'll become serious about what we're proposing," Elderkin said.

Wonstolen, the senior vice president and general counsel for the oil and gas association, said the energy industry recognizes there are special places on the plateau that should be protected and that it could be made a showcase for development.

Elderkin, who worked on the Roan Plateau while with the BLM, said he wants strong rules in place to make sure development leads to good examples across the West.

"This current gas play is different from anything we've experienced in the past because in the past we were always talking about a specific oil field or specific gas field of limited geographical extent," he said, standing beside the East Fork of Parachute Creek as it flowed toward a 200-foot waterfall. "This gas play is literally from horizon to horizon."