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Photo: Mike Rosso |
Arkansas Headwaters Recreation Area by
Christopher Kolomitz
Mountain Mail, Salida
Stretching nearly 150 miles from Leadville to Cañon
City, the Arkansas Headwaters Recreation Area delivers anglers a truly
wild white
water and
flat water experience. Managed through agreements with Colorado State Parks, Colorado Division
of Wildlife, U.S. Forest Service, U.S. Bureau of Land Management, the
AHRA includes 28 developed recreation sites and numerous non-fee recreation
access points. In summer 2005 228,091 people rafted the river on 42,517 commercial
rafts, according to a AHRA study. That represents a 12 percent increase
in the
number of people using the river compared to 2004. Some of that increase was recorded in a section of river between Salida
and Vallie Bridge, where float trips have become popular in the flat
water. Use there was up about 900 boaters, the study reported. While such numbers of boaters may sound daunting to the fly angler
in search of trout and solitude, the vast majority of commercial
boating takes place
on a few key sections of the Arkansas and the industry is closely
regulated on other sections of the river to protect the fishing
experience. If you plan to fish the river during the primary summer vacation
period (mid-June to mid-August), avoiding the rafting crowds
is an important
consideration. Above Fishermans Bridge upstream of Browns Canyon,
rafting traffic is minimal,
particularly afternoons. The Browns Canyon run, from Fishermans
Bridge to Stone Bridge, is very busy with commercial raft trips
during the
summer, particularly on weekends. If you want to fish the Canyon,
or the excellent
water above it, wait until after 4 p.m. when the raft traffic
normally clears out. Below Browns Canyon, from Stone Bridge all the way to Pinnacle
Rock (some 50 miles of river), commercial raft traffic is light.
This
is because
the gradient and technicality of the river through this reach
is not challenging
enough to produce a significant number of exciting rapids. But that gradient makes for some great float trips, as is evident
in the number of local anglers who use their boats to float
the section of river
from Big Bend to Salida or all the way to Vallie Bridge. During the period outside of high water, regulations call
for no more than 10 commercial boats (raft trips, kayak
instruction and
float fishing
trips)
passing any one point each day between Big Bend and Texas
Creek. Regs also require that all non-fishing commercial boats
be off the river by 5 p.m. Below Pinnacle Rock, raft
traffic increases thanks
to rapids
in Parkdale and Royal Gorge. However, since the water
is generally warmer at this lower end of the river, evening
fishing is often
the best mid-summer
option through this reach anyway. While use of the developed sites frequently requires
a fee (look for the entrance signs and fee tubes),
no permits
or
fees are
required outside of these sites. Public access outside of developed areas is marked,
look for brown signs explaining where public and
private land
begins. Established in the late 1980s in response to increasing
recreational pressure on the resource, the AHRA
has been responsible for
a vast increase in public
access on the river. That increase has been greatly
augmented by the works of a partner agency, the
Colorado Division
of Wildlife. The DOW has developed leases of private lands for
public fishing access and the establishment of
State Wildlife
Areas within
the AHRA opened
up even more access.
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