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Author: I-70 Scout

  • CDOT prepares for heightened DUI enforcement as Sturgis Rally rides through Colorado

    4,644 impaired crashes happened overnight since 2019

    Haga clic aquí para ver este comunicado de prensa El Departamento de Transporte de Colorado refuerza la vigilancia de DUI mientras el Sturgis Rally atraviesa el estado en español.

    Statewide — As thousands of motorcyclists gear up to ride across state lines, the Colorado Department of Transportation, Colorado State Patrol (CSP) and local law enforcement agencies will unite to keep impaired drivers – and riders – off Colorado roads. During the Sturgis Rally DUI enforcement period from Aug. 3–15, there will be increased safety patrols aiming to keep all motorists safe.

    The annual rally brings motorcyclists from across the nation through Colorado to Sturgis, North Dakota for the annual festival. Regardless of when and where riders are on the road, motorcyclists are urged to ride sober during their travels. Last year 308 DUI arrests were made during the same heightened enforcement period.

    “If you are planning to drink, you also need to plan a sober ride,” said Col. Matthew C. Packard, CSP Chief. “We want Coloradans to enjoy summer activities but also remember to never drive impaired. Rally participants have a long ride ahead of them, and everyone needs to be aware of their surroundings at all times on the road.”

    While Sturgis Rally riders will be traveling day and night on their way to South Dakota, most impaired crashes tend to occur at night. A 2023 CSP report shows that from January 2019 to April 2023, most impaired fatal, injury and property crashes occurred during evening hours (6 p.m. to 9:59 p.m.) and late night (10 p.m. to 1:59 a.m.) hours. A total of 4,644 impaired crashes happened at night during that time period.

    The Heat is On Graphic with text "Rally Responsibly. Ride Sober."

    “With more people on our roads during the rally, it’s especially important to drive sober or plan a safe ride home,” said CDOT’s Office of Transportation Safety Director Darrell Lingk. “It is up to all motorists and riders to remember the consequences and dangers of getting behind the wheel or handlebars under the influence.”

    Planning on driving at night? Here are a few reminders:

    • Plan a sober ride home before heading out.
    • Make sure rideshare is available for your guests to use if you are hosting a gathering.
    • Buzzed driving is drunk driving. Even one drink is enough to impair your driving ability.

    The previous Summer Strikeout enforcement period concluded with 171 DUI arrests across 69 participating law enforcement agencies. The agencies with the highest number of arrests were Colorado Springs Police Department (28), Larimer County Sheriff’s Office (12) and Longmont Police Department (23). Additionally, CSP reported 33 arrests.

    For yearly impaired driving crash and fatality data in Colorado, visit codot.gov/safety/traffic-safety/data-analysis/fatal-crash-data. For local law enforcement agency plans, visit codot.gov/safety/traffic-safety-reporting-portal.

    About The Heat Is On

    The CDOT Highway Safety Office provides funding to Colorado law enforcement for impaired driving enforcement, education and awareness campaigns. The Heat Is On campaign runs throughout the year, with 16 specific high-visibility impaired driving enforcement periods centered on national holidays and large public events. Enforcement periods can include sobriety checkpoints, saturation patrols and additional law enforcement on duty dedicated to impaired driving enforcement. Find more details about the campaign, including impaired driving enforcement plans, arrest totals and safety tips at HeatIsOnColorado.com. More information about DUI laws in Colorado can be found at NoDUIColorado.org. Learn more about CDOT’s dedication to keeping Colorado roads safe, including impaired driving enforcement objectives, arrest data and safety information at codot.gov/safety.

  • Colorado National Guard electromagnetic warfare squadron celebrates new facility

    BUCKLEY SPACE FORCE BASE, Colo. – The Colorado National Guard’s 138th Electromagnetic Warfare Squadron will host a ribbon-cutting ceremony to mark the opening of its new facility at Peterson Space Force Base, Colorado Springs, Colorado, at 9 a.m., Aug. 5, 2023.
    The ceremony represents the next step in Colorado Air National Guard Space operations and is the result of a multi-year effort by hundreds of individuals who have contributed to the occasion. This will be the permanent home of the 138th EWS and will be the foundation for unit, or according to their motto, “ghostrider,” operations for many years to come.
    “This ribbon-cutting ceremony, demonstrated by our squadron’s military construction project as ready for beneficial occupancy, symbolizes a major step toward the 138th Electromagnetic Warfare Squadron achieving full-operational capability,” U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Andrew Gold, commander, 138th EWS said. “This is a momentous event for our squadron, the 233rd Space Group, and the 140th Wing. This day would not be possible without the incredible dedication and support of the 140th Civil Engineering Squadron, 140th Wing Contracting Office, our National Guard Bureau partners, and numerous other individuals and agencies who helped see this project through to success.”
    The new facility provides 138th Airmen with a state-of-the-art building that will simultaneously increase readiness and modernization through more efficient training so they can focus on accomplishing their real-world mission. This will be a centralized location to train and prepare Colorado Guard members for their critical federal and state missions. From a strategic perspective, the 138th will be able to train more Guard members in a more efficient manner than currently exists.
    Air National Guard Space EW squadrons have consistently deployed to the U.S. Central Command and U.S. Africa Command theaters since 2018. The units typically deploy to Space EW Counter Communications Systems already in theater.
    The 138th Space Control Squadron stood up in May 2019 and has rapidly improved the training environment to create the most realistic wartime scenarios possible, preparing space professionals for future wartime missions.
    These Airmen remain unaligned with their natural Active Component mission partner, the U.S. Space Force.  The establishment of a Space National Guard would preserve the combat readiness of our ANG space units and leverage this capacity and resident space expertise to support our National Defense Strategy.
    ANG space units defend our nation on behalf of U.S. Space Command and combatant commanders across various mission areas: missile warning; space domain awareness; satellite command and control; military satellite communications; space electromagnetic warfare operations; space test and training; analysis of space intelligence.
  • Colorado State Patrol partners with local jurisdictions on statewide surge enforcement this Friday

    (COLORADO) On Friday, August 4, 2023 CSP troops across the state will be partnering with local jurisdictions to reduce fatal crashes on the most traveled highways.  As the 100 deadliest days of travel begins to close, we know travelers are wanting to get in those last-minute trips before the kids go back to school.  It is our number one priority to ensure that everybody gets to their destinations safely.  There have been 8058 motorists contacted during surge enforcement efforts so far in 2023.  

    Enforcement efforts alone do not save lives.  We need your help.

    Ensure all occupants in a vehicle are bucked up.  Being thrown from a vehicle in a rollover crash could end tragically.  
    Drive safe.  This includes putting the distractions aside and focusing all of your attention on driving.  Don’t engage in road rage.  Let those dangerous drivers get safely around you and if possible, have a passenger notify *CSP
    Always drive sober.  Whether you are impaired by alcohol, recreational drugs or prescription medications, they all impair your ability to safely operate a vehicle.  Never get behind the wheel impaired.
  • Remaining big game hunting licenses go on sale August 1 at 9 a.m.

    Photo courtesy of Wayne D. Lewis/CPW
    DENVER – The big (game) day is almost here! Hunters mark their calendars for the first Tuesday in August each year to take a shot at any big game hunting licenses remaining after the primary and secondary draws. Remaining licenses for 2023 are placed on the leftover list and will become available for purchase on August 1 at 9 a.m. Mountain Time. Over-the-counter licenses for elk, bear, archery pronghorn, and whitetail deer will go on sale at the same time.

    Licenses go on sale online, over the phone, and in-person at CPW offices and sales locations all at once. Limited licenses are first come first served and this is the first opportunity to get a big game hunting license outside of the draw process. 

    Licenses that will become available include:

    • Limited licenses leftover after the primary and secondary draws for elk, deer, pronghorn and bear
    • Limited elk, deer, pronghorn, and bear licenses that someone drew but surrendered or did not pay for during the secondary draw that took fewer than five resident preference points
    • Limited licenses that were returned for refund/preference point restoration since the opening of the secondary draw but prior to July 24 and took fewer than five resident preference points to draw
    • Over-the-counter (OTC) licenses for elk, archery pronghorn, whitetail deer, and bear

    Preparing for sales day
    CPW locations and sales agents will be very busy that morning, so try to get prepared ahead of time.

    Log into the online system a few days prior to sales day to ensure your information, such as email and mailing address, is up-to-date. If you have any problems getting into your account, contact CPW ahead of time for assistance. 

    Have your hunt codes and credit/debit card number ready. Check the leftover list, write down all hunt codes you are interested in, and list them with your most coveted licenses first.

    If you call the CPW sales line for your purchase, be prepared for extended wait times and have all of your information – including hunt codes – ready. The sales line representatives will not be able to look up hunt codes for you.  

    Inventory held in shopping cart
    When you enter a hunt code and confirm it, that hunt code is “held” for you in the cart for 15 minutes or until you process the transaction, whichever comes first. If the time is allowed to expire, another customer can hold/purchase that hunt code.

    Keep the inventory hold system in mind when attempting to purchase licenses from multiple species. Licenses are held in your cart for 15 minutes. Be sure to pay within that timeframe or licenses become available for someone else.

    Queuing system
    CPW’s licensing vendor Aspira utilizes a virtual queuing program, called Queue-It, to mitigate the load on the system. While products go on sale at 9 a.m., customers who are on the site and logged in up to an hour prior will be placed in the queue. Do not go further than the residency page until 9 a.m.or you will be moved to the back of the queue.

    Additional information
    You can only purchase for one person at a time, so it may be necessary to work on multiple devices if you are purchasing for multiple people like your children or spouse.

    For each species, hunters are limited to one list A and one list B, or two list B licenses. If you received a list A license from the primary or secondary draw, you are only eligible for a list B or list C license. If you received a list B or list C from the primary or secondary draw, you are eligible for either a list A, list B or list C license.

    Because the online leftover list updates every 5 – 10 minutes, a hunt code may still be listed as available, even if it is sold out. 

    Where to purchase
    CPW strongly suggests hunters purchase their licenses online at cpwshop.com.CPW offices and sales locations use the same system as you do at home.

    Head to cpwshop.com and get logged in to your account up to an hour before 9 a.m. on August 1 so you’re ready to purchase when the licenses go on sale. You can call in and purchase at 1-800-244-5613, but know there will be long wait times.

    More information on the leftover list and over-the-counter licenses is available on the CPW website

    Additional licenses will become available as part of our reissue processbeginning August 9.

  • Female Suspect in the Parental Kidnapping Arrested

    On July 21, 2023, law enforcement was able to track down the female suspect Clarissa Gardette to a hotel in the Houston, Texas, area where she was taken into custody and is being held at the Harris County, Texas Jail on several warrants: Violation of Child Custody – $50,000 bond, Failure to Appear – $4,000 bond and Contempt of Court – $100,000 Bond where she is awaiting extradition to Colorado. The missing children and male suspect Howard Myles are still at large and are believed to be in the Houston, TX or Baton Rouge, LA area where they both have family. The male suspect is wanted for Violation of Child Custody – $15,000 bond and Contempt of Court – $100,000 bond. Howard could be driving the female suspect’s Gold 2005 Honda Pilot or could be in a 2004 – 2008 Gold Pontiac Grand Prix with a sunroof and Black Wheels. Investigators are asking family members and the public that may have information to contact the Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office Tip Line at 720-874-8477 or Metro Denver Crime Stoppers at 720-913-STOP(7867).

    The Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office and its Investigators would like to thank our local and federal partners in Colorado and Texas for their continued assistance in attempting to locate the young children safely.

     

  • CPW Day of Giving, donate today to support Colorado’s outdoors


    Give back to the outdoor spaces we love.
    Support Colorado Parks and Wildlife and donate today!

    DENVER – Today, Colorado Parks and Wildlife (CPW) is hosting its first CPW Day of Giving, a 24-hour fundraising campaign to raise funds for CPW programs and projects.

    Donors make a big difference in the work of CPW. Every contribution goes a long way to help protect our wildlife and natural spaces, support our state parks and outdoor recreational opportunities, and introduce new people to all the wonders of Colorado’s great outdoors.

    All dollars raised through the Day of Giving will sponsor CPW programs and projects. Below are five programs our donors help support:

    • Agents of Discovery is an augmented reality gaming platform, inspired by Pokémon GO, that provides free self-guided experiences to learn about our state parks in fun and engaging ways. Agents of Discovery is available at 14 Colorado state parks and guests have played more than 17,700 missions.
    • Colorado’s Conservation Data Explorer (CODEX) is an interactive mapping tool that hosts critical natural resource data for conservation planners and decision-makers in Colorado. The project allows users to screen a project area for potential impacts on threatened, endangered and special concern species and their habitats. CODEX brings together data to support conservation planning, recreation planning, the conservation easement process, environmental review, evaluation of conservation portfolios, education and more.
    • Macroinvertebrate Monitoring: River Watch is a CPW program composed of volunteers from 122 different public, private, and charter school groups, watershed organizations, and dedicated individuals who monitor 274 river sites throughout Colorado. Each year these volunteers gather the samples that provide CPW scientists with data about aquatic habitat quality, including measuring the levels of nutrients and metals in streams.
    • CPW K9 Program: CPW has three extraordinary officers that come to work on four legs. K9s Cash, Sampson, and Sci put their talents to use helping their two-legged colleagues find and gather evidence in poaching cases, release bears that are being relocated away from populated areas to safer spaces, and have even sniffed out endangered species like Boreal Toads and Black Footed Ferrets. They also are some of CPW’s most popular teachers and participate in educational presentations at schools and communities across the state.
    • The Aquatic Toxicology Program has allowed CPW to increase the technical and scientific services provided and conduct much-needed research on Western Slope threatened and endangered fish species. From invasive species like zebra mussels to monitoring survival and stress hormones of Cutthroat Trout, measuring the effect of water temperature on Colorado’s native fish populations, and extensive sampling of the state’s fish hatcheries, the Aquatic Toxicology Program is providing valuable data to improve water quality policies and inform management decisions.

    For more information on CPW’s philanthropy program, visit cpw.state.co.us/donate.

  • 2023’s Best Cities for Cornhole Lovers

    Which cities offer the best access to casual and competitive cornhole games?

    LawnStarter ranked 2023’s Best Cities for Cornhole Lovers to mark the 2023 American Cornhole Organization Worlds (July 24–29) and the American Cornhole League World championships (July 29–Aug. 6).

    We compared the 200 biggest U.S. cities based on three categories. We looked at access to cornhole venues, park and yard space, clubs, and tournaments, among 10 total metrics.

    See the 10 best (and 10 worst) cities for cornhole fans below, followed by key stats from our report.

    Key Insights:

    • Texas Throwdown: Houston tossed to the top with the most cornhole clubs and the 3rd-highest number of cornhole venues. Space City also hosted 374 cornhole tournaments in the past year, the 6th-highest number in our ranking.
    • California Catapults: 25 Golden State cities cast their way into the first half of our ranking. Folks don’t need their own boards in San Jose (No. 9), which offers the most cornhole venues. Sunny San Diego (No. 2) tied with Phoenix (No. 3) for the most American Cornhole League (ACL) Directors.
    • Tourney Time: Wichita, Kansas (No. 102), hosted the most cornhole tournaments in the past year — an astounding 666. Indianapolis (No. 4) follows with 564 tournaments, while Albuquerque, New Mexico (No. 112), claims the 3rd-highest number, 541. These are a mix of casual and competitive events hosted by local leagues.
    • Professional Pitches: Salem, Oregon (No. 40) — the only Beaver State city to finish in the top 100 — scheduled the most ACL events so far for the upcoming year, followed by Chicago (No. 17) and Chesapeake, Virginia (No. 13). Players compete in these events if they aspire to qualify for the ACL World Championships.
    • Virginia Is for Cornhole Lovers: Five Old Dominion cities launched in the upper half of our leaderboard, with Virginia Beach (No. 6) ranking in the top 10. Resort City offers the best overall Access, with plenty of park and yard space, as well as the 2nd-highest number of cornhole venues.
    • Big-City Interest: New York (No. 52), Los Angeles (No. 14), and Houston (No. 1) boast the top three highest cornhole-related Google search volumes, respectively. Unfortunately, New Yorkers and Angelenos have scarce Access to cornhole venues and spacious backyards. NYC also lacks ACL leagues and directors.

    Helpful Links:

  • Celebrate Colorado! Governor Polis Highlights a Full Week of Events to Celebrate 147th Annual Colorado Day

     

    DENVER- This year marks the 147th annual Colorado Day, and ahead of August 1, Governor Polis encourages Coloradans to celebrate safely and highlights upcoming events happening statewide during this year’s Celebrate Colorado. August 1 marks the day Colorado officially entered the Union and became a state, and now serves as a time to look back on the history of our state, promote local businesses, and come together to celebrate everything that makes Colorado great. Community organizations, restaurants, businesses and state agencies have added free and discounted events statewide starting July 28, 2023 through August 6, 2023.  


    “Let’s Celebrate Colorado and wish Colorado a very happy birthday! Every year, I look forward to the opportunity to celebrate Colorado and its 147 years of unique history,” said Governor Polis. “I am thrilled to see the excitement from communities, businesses, and Coloradans this year – over 250 events – I encourage everyone to visit the Celebrate Colorado map to find an event in their community, spend time with neighbors and friends, support local businesses, and have fun celebrating the many reasons Colorado is the best place to live!” 


    This year there are a variety of celebrations and local events promoting our great Colorado culture statewide. Events will be happening around the state and include many free or discounted events, historical learning experiences, opportunities to support Colorado businesses, and events that bring neighbors and friends together. 


    A few of the events happening next week include: 


    The Celebrate Colorado map is open to anyone to add an event.  Events can still be submitted through next week and can be sent by visiting this form.To see the full list of over 250 events the state is highlighting visit https://celebrate.colorado.gov/
  • Kansan pleads guilty to poaching moose after CPW tracks him down with public’s help

    This image from a privately owned game camera showed Steven Samuelson of Oakley, Kan., as he stalked and illegally killed a bull moose in Teller County in September 2021. Samuelson pleaded guilty on July 10 to willful destruction of wildlife, a felony, and several lesser charges in the poaching incident. Photo courtesy of Colorado Parks and Wildlife

    Kansan pleads guilty to poaching moose after public helps CPW track him down

    COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – After a near two-year investigation that included confronting a suspected poacher at his job in Kansas, Colorado Parks and Wildlife has secured a conviction in the case of a bull moose illegally killed in Teller County and left to rot.

    The case ended July 10 when Steven Samuelson, 33, of Oakley, Kan., pleaded guilty in Teller County District Court to willful destruction of wildlife, a felony, as well as misdemeanor charges of hunting without a proper and valid big game license, aggravated illegal possession of wildlife, failure to prepare wildlife for human consumption, hunting in a careless manner and illegal take of wildlife.

    Samuelson received a two year deferred jail sentence on the felony charge, meaning it will be waived if he meets the terms of the plea agreement, and two years unsupervised probation.

    In addition, Samuelson was fined nearly $20,000 and surrendered the bow he used to poach the moose as well as other property that contained evidence of the crime including his cellphone. Samuelson also was assessed 65 points against his hunting license, with just 20 needed to suspend his hunting privileges.

    CPW’s Tim Kroening, Area Wildlife Manager for the Pikes Peak region, praised the public for calling CPW when they suspected poaching. And he credited Samuelson’s plea agreement to the relentless investigative work by CPW officers who amassed overwhelming evidence against the Kansan.

    “As the agency responsible for perpetuating the wildlife resources of the state, Colorado Parks and Wildlife will not tolerate poaching,” Kroening said. “Our officers are determined to stop people like Mr. Samuelson who think they can simply go kill any animal they like. I want to make it clear: Mr. Samuelson was not a hunter. He is a poacher.”

    The investigation began in September 2021 when CPW’s office in Colorado Springs received a report that someone had illegally shot a bull moose with an arrow in the woods north of Divide.

    CPW Officers Aaron Berscheid, Travis Sauder and Ben Meier responded to the area to investigate and were led to the remains of the mature bull moose by the reporting parties.

    The CPW team concluded a suspected poacher had shot the moose and then attempted to remove the head of the animal. Ultimately, the suspect laid tree branches and sticks across the carcass in an attempt to hide it.

    Officers collected physical evidence from the site including photos and video from the reporting party’s game cameras which pinpointed the time of the incident and provided photos of the suspect.

    “This moose was treated unethically and that is something we take very seriously,” said Sauder, assistant area wildlife manager for the Pikes Peak region. “We are fortunate members of the public share our passion for wildlife and helped us catch the poacher.

    “We rely on honest sportspeople to help us solve these types of cases.”

    Besides the public’s help, CPW used old-fashioned police work to track Samuelson down. The investigation reached a climax when Sauder and Meier drove to Kansas where they worked with members of the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks to confront Samuelson at work and execute a search warrant to gather valuable evidence at Samuelson’s Oakley home.

    Kroening and Sauder praised the assistance their team received from the original reporting parties who hiked them to the moose, the Colorado Springs Police Department for helping access evidence on Samuelson’s phone, and prosecutors with the Fourth Judicial District Attorney’s office for moving the case forward and securing the plea agreement.

    “Moose have become an iconic part of the Colorado landscape and have flourished since being reintroduced in 1978,” Kroening said. “The current population is estimated to be near 3,000 animals and they have spread throughout the state. 

    “While this creates many wonderful opportunities to photograph, view and hunt these animals, it has also created temptation among some to illegally poach these animals. The Samuelson case, and others, show CPW is determined to stop future poachers.”

    Have information of a possible crime against wildlife? Call CPW, or report it anonymously to ​Operation Game Thief, or OGT. Reach OGT by calling, toll-free, 1-877-COLO-OGT (or 877-265-6648). Verizon users can dial #OGT. Or email CPW at ​​.

    A $500 reward is offered for information on cases involving big game or endangered species, while $250 is offered for information on turkey and $100 for fishing and small game cases. 

    A Citizens Committee administers the reward fund, which is maintained by private contributions. The board may approve rewards of up to $1,000 for flagrant cases. Rewards are paid for information that leads to an arrest or a citation being issued.

    To learn more about Operation Game Thief, visit the CPW website.

    A privately owned game camera captured still photos and images showing Steven Samuelson of Oakley, Kan., as he stalked and illegally killed a bull moose in Teller County in September 2021.


    Another image shows Samuelson’s attempt to cover up the carcass after he abandoned his effort to remove the head.


    Samuelson pleaded guilty on July 10 to willful destruction of wildlife, a felony, and several lesser charges in the poaching incident.


    Photos courtesy of Colorado Parks and Wildlife

  • CPW ranger saves three people in dramatic, midnight rescue on Arkansas River

    Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s Jeff Hammond, a river ranger with the Arkansas Headwaters Recreation Area, made three trips across the Arkansas River at midnight on July 6, 2023, to rescue three people who were tossed into the water in a rapid in Browns Canyon. Members of Chaffee County Search and Rescue held spotlights from the east bank as Hammond paddled his kayak to the west side to reach the victims. Photo courtesy of Chaffee County Search and Rescue.

    CPW ranger saves three in dramatic, midnight rescue on Arkansas River

    BUENA VISTA, Colo. – It was nearly bedtime, after 10 p.m., when Jeff Hammond, a river ranger with Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s Arkansas Headwaters Recreation Area, received a call for help from the Chaffee County Sheriff’s office.

    “They told me a boat with three people in it had flipped in Zoom Flume in Browns Canyon,” Hammond said. “They had made contact with one person and two were unaccounted for. All three were still in the canyon and needed to be rescued. So I quickly got back in uniform, grabbed my gear and jumped in my truck.”

    Late-night rescues of boaters on the Arkansas River are not common. And it would not be easy searching in Browns Canyon, a 13-mile boulder-strewn gorge between Buena Vista and Salida carved over eons by the Arkansas. 

    But Hammond didn’t hesitate even knowing he’d be fighting exactly what makes Browns Canyon one of the most popular stretches of whitewater in Colorado: its series of Class 3 rapids that draw people from across the nation to experience.

    On this July 6 night, Hammond headed a few miles south of Buena Vista to Nathrop to rendezvous with the Chaffee County Search and Rescue (SAR) North Team and begin the search. The plan was for two SAR members on all-terrain vehicles (ATV) to take Hammond down the abandoned railroad tracks that parallel the river through the canyon until they reached the Zoom Flume rapids.

    “I was told an off-duty commercial raft guide had taken two people out on a private trip around 7:30 p.m.,” Hammond said. “That should have given them enough time to reach their take-out spot at Hecla Junction. But they never made it.”

    Cellphone service in the canyon is unreliable but the guide was able to send a 9-1-1 text for help, alerting authorities of the incident.

    It was approaching 11:30 p.m. when Hammond hopped on the back of an SAR ATV with his gear, kayak and paddle and off they rode into the darkness, bouncing down the railroad tracks as the river roared below them through the rapids of the canyon.

    As the trio headed south down the tracks, another team from Chaffee County SAR South, headed northbound from Hecla Junction on electric bikes that they ferried on a raft across the river.

    It took Hammond and the SAR team about 20 minutes to reach Zoom Flume where they began hearing shouts for help from the other side of the churning river.

    “We found the two friends who had been tossed out of the raft,” Hammond said. “They were on the river bank on the west side. They couldn’t hike out because they were cliffed out by the canyon walls.”

    So Hammond bushwhacked down through the brush from the tracks to the water’s edge. In the pitch black, he studied what he could see of the river using his headlamp.

    “There was no moonlight in the canyon and the water was roaring through the rapids, just upstream,” Hammond said, describing the scene. “I scouted the river, plotted a course to the two victims and put my kayak in the water.”

    Hammond said the water was calm where he entered, but it quickly turned into whitewater and it was unnerving even to someone like him – an expert kayaker who has logged many days on the Arkansas since he joined the AHRA in 2017.

    “It’s still whitewater and you are trying to judge the rapids through the relatively small beam of light from your headlamp,” he said.

    Hammond was aided by the two SAR members who used spotlights to help guide him to the victims as he paddled the 25 yards across to the two victims. After assessing their condition and determining they were uninjured and in no imminent danger, he left them with a promise to return. Then he paddled back across the river to resume the search to locate the guide.

    A mile downstream he found her and the raft, also on the opposite river bank. Hammond repeated his process of bushwhacking, scouting the river and paddling across. The guide was also uninjured. So he loaded her and his kayak into her raft and they paddled back across the river to the waiting SAR members.

    “We basically hopped from boulder to boulder, resting in the calm water below the boulders before resuming our paddling,” Hammond said.

    Then they loaded the guide, the raft and the kayak onto the ATVs and went back upstream a mile to the two friends left on the riverbank.

    Hammond made his third and final roundtrip crossing of the river that night on the raft with the guide. They reached the two friends who climbed aboard and the four paddled back across where the two ATVs were waiting.

    The SAR members drove the two friends to Nathrop, then returned to get the guide, Hammond, and his kayak.

    At 2:30 a.m., Hammond said he texted his fiance’ he was coming home for the night.

    As wild an incident as it was, Hammond said it could have been much worse and ended tragically.

    “First, they were all wearing life jackets,” Hammond said. “That’s the biggest thing. And they had a cellphone. Even though they couldn’t make a call, they could send a text for help.”

    Best of all, they didn’t panic, Hammond said. When they realized they wouldn’t be able to hike out, they stayed put and planned to wait for daylight when commercial rafting trips would provide a means for rescue.

    “If things go wrong, don’t compound the problems,” Hammond said. “Call for search and rescue. It’s free and safer than wandering off into the wilderness. We’d rather get a call early and start searching than get a late call and face a more complex rescue.”

    PHOTO CAPTIONS:


    As midnight approached on July 6, 2023, Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s Jeff Hammond, a river ranger with the Arkansas Headwaters Recreation Area, hung on the back of Chaffee County Search and Rescue all-terrain vehicle as part of a search for three people who were trapped in Browns Canyon after their raft flipped on a private trip. Hammond and the SAR team rode down dirt trails and then railroad tracks until they found the stranded boaters in the river. Photo courtesy of Colorado Parks and Wildlife / Jeff Hammond


    The rescue team on July 6, 2023, included two Chaffee County Search and Rescue members on all-terrain vehicles, two on electric bicycles, and Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s Jeff Hammond, a river ranger with the Arkansas Headwaters Recreation Area, who brought his kayak and ended up making three trips across the Arkansas River at midnight to rescue three people who were tossed into the water in a rapid in Browns Canyon. Photo courtesy of Colorado Parks and Wildlife / Jeff Hammond


    Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s Jeff Hammond, a river ranger with the Arkansas Headwaters Recreation Area, in a recent file photo. Photo courtesy of Colorado Parks and Wildlife


    Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s Jeff Hammond, a river ranger with the Arkansas Headwaters Recreation Area, paddled a raft across the Arkansas River to rescue stranded boaters who became lost in Browns Canyon when their boat flipped in Zoom Flume rapid. Photo courtesy of Chaffee County Search and Rescue.