Fishing /coloradan/ en A Tribute to Boulder Creek /coloradan/2022/07/11/tribute-boulder-creek A Tribute to Boulder Creek Anonymous (not verified) Mon, 07/11/2022 - 00:00 Categories: Column Tags: Boulder Fishing Duncan McHenry

From its braided headwaters high above Nederland in Indian Peaks Wilderness to the rolling farmlands where it flows into the South Platte River, is a stream of many personalities. It’s also one that gets overlooked by many Boulder locals and visitors simply because it is so close to home. But for fly-anglers, it represents a true gem that can feel hidden in plain sight.

This will be my seventh year working as a guide for , a fly-fishing shop that’s just minutes away from The Hill and Pearl Street. In that time, fishing — “the pursuit of what is elusive but attainable,” as the novelist John Buchan once wrote — introduced me to clients ranging from prominent doctors and professional snowboarders to foreign families traveling abroad and Midwesterners on vacation.

I’ve guided many of them in Boulder Canyon, where the flatter pools of downtown melt away and car-sized boulders, towering granite walls and stands of ponderosa pines dominate. The reaction I get after telling someone there are hundreds of trout per mile in “the Creek” tends to be one of mild surprise. Then I try telling them that they can fly-fish for wild trout from the concrete sidewalk at Eben G. Fine Park, and the look on their face often turns to utter disbelief.

And it’s hard to blame them given the challenges our creek faces today — mainly in the form of urban waste and water-quality issues. Though great stream improvement efforts have been made by Boulder Flycasters, the local Trout Unlimited conservation chapter, it remains a constant battle to keep Boulder Creek clean, fishable and safe for recreation. In the face of it all, despite flowing through such a densely populated area, the creek continues to harbor plenty of the brown and rainbow trout that local anglers pursue.

Those of us who love this stream tend to enjoy it in all its forms — from the gin-clear waters of the high country to the marshy parts of east Boulder. There’s something mysterious, and sort of improbable, about catching a beautifully patterned wild trout right next to an equally colorful graffiti tag at Scott Carpenter Park. Boulder Creek may not be Montana’s Blackfoot River, enshrined in the sport’s popular archetype of A River Runs Through It, but it has a wealth of secrets to share. Best of all: It’s right in our own backyard.

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Photos by Duncan McHenry 

A local fishing guide writes about the beauty of Boulder Creek.

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Norlin the Fisherman /coloradan/2020/06/01/norlin-fisherman Norlin the Fisherman Anonymous (not verified) Mon, 06/01/2020 - 11:00 Categories: Old CU Tags: Fishing George Norlin

A fly fisher’s paradise is located 7.5 miles west of Lyons, Colorado, in an area now known as the Button Rock Preserve. Starting in 1928, however, former CU president George Norlin and 13 others owned a ranch in the area they called St. Vrain Ranch.

The community of Lyons dubbed the ranch “The Professors’ Ranch,” as 12 of the ranch’s initial shareholders were CU faculty or administrators. Norlin, whose flies are pictured to the right, had a cabin built on the land. After his academic year in Berlin, Germany, from 1932 to 1933, he wrote several addresses from the cabin regarding his experiences and views of Adolf Hitler.

After graduation ceremonies, Norlin typically brought the commencement speaker up to the ranch for a few days of relaxation.

Photo courtesy Mona Lambracht, CU Heritage Center

George Norlin is famous for many things around CU's campus, but you might not know just how much he loved to fish.

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