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Did the Old Spanish Trail Really Go Through Grand Junction?
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Did the Old Spanish Trail Really Go Through Grand Junction?
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Grand County teen takes flight
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In the 1800s, humans were busy scurrying across the globe prying into the blank spots on the map, why? Because, of course, they were
there. From the frozen poles of the Earth to its darkest jungles, we had a guy on it. Here in the United States, the transcontinental railroad had opened up the nation. But, despite nearly a century of poking around by native peoples, Spanish padres, men military, mountain and Mormon, there remained one big question mark over the terrain through which flowed the Green and the Colorado Rivers.
On then-existing maps of the area between Green River Wyoming and St. Thomas, Nevada, there might as well have been a label, in all-caps, bolded, italicized, underlined and with exclamation points:
A solitary winter angler on the Roaring Fork in Glenwood Springs. Photo by Scott Spooner
The top mile of the Fryingpan tailwater is a place of legend, where large fish are known to be as picky as your kids at the dining room table. Seemingly, during January, it is one of the only places to fish here in the Valley, but things are already changing out there for the fly angler. Ice that once choked the Roaring Fork has started to clear. The Colorado has seen some decent midge hatches, which recent 40-ish degree days have helped usher in. There are sections of the Roaring Fork that are open from bank to bank, depending on the elevation and how much sunlight can hit it. Let’s hope for a wet February and March!