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Rocky Mountain National Park

For more detailed information on the key streams
of Rocky Mountain National Park, click on each of the links below.
For information on Fly Fishing in Rocky Mountain National Park,
click here.
Big Thompson River
Colorado River
St. Vrain River
Established in 1915, Rocky Mountain National Park became the 10th National
Park in the United States. Covering 416 square miles, the Park has over
114 named peaks towering over 10,000 feet, 147 lakes (50 with fish in
them) and populations of bear, bighorn sheep, coyote, deer, elk, moose and
mountain lion.
Located roughly 65 northwest of Denver, the Park sees over 3 million
visitors each year. Of course, some of those numbers are locals that live
close enough to visit several times a week, but the Park receives visitors
from all over the world each year.
Rocky Mountain National Park also has the highest paved highway in the
United States; Trail Ridge Road. Cresting over 12,183 feet, this road is
only open from Memorial Day through late September. When the heavy snows
begin to make it too difficult to keep open, this easy access to the
Western Slope of the Continental Divide is closed. From the eastern portal
near Estes Park to the western portal near Grand Lake is approximately 45
miles.
Sitting high above the surrounding areas, the Park hosts the headwaters to
the Colorado River, the Big Thompson River, the Cache La Poudre River and
the St. Vrain Creek. There are a myriad of lakes and small streams that
feed these drainages, and most hold fish. In fact, within the boundaries
of the Park you can catch:
The one trout you may not recognize on that list is the
Greenback
Cutthroat Trout. By 1937, this fish was on the verge of following its
cousin, the Yellowfin Cutthroat Trout, into extinction. However, two small
populations were discovered in the South Fork of the Poudre River and in
Como Creek, which provided brood stocks for hatcheries.
Through the combined efforts of the BLM, Colorado State University, the
U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, U.S. Forest Service, National Park Service,
and the Colorado Division of Wildlife, the Greenback Cutthroat can now be
found in streams throughout the Park and Northern Colorado.
Click here for a downloadable map of Rocky Mountain
National Park |