Colorado’s Yampa River Named World’s 10th Most Threatened Paddling Run
Canoe & Kayak magazine has compiled a list of ten classic paddling runs around the globe that
are critically endangered. Calling upon athletes, adventurers and conservationists to speak on
behalf of each of the runs, the list focuses on rivers that offer stretches of world-class
whitewater and/or wilderness paddling, but are threatened by dams, diversions or other
development projects.
Threatened Paddling Classic #10: The Yampa River
The Yampa River is often called one of the last free-flowing rivers in the Colorado River basin.
The small dams near its headwaters have a negligible effect on the river’s natural
hydrograph, allowing floods of snowmelt to rage down its canyons each spring, followed by low
flows of late summer and winter. This short season of high flows—combined with the
Yampa’s popular Class III-IV rapids, wilderness character and stunning sandstone
canyons—make the 44-mile Yampa Canyon from Deerlodge Park to the Green River confluence in
Dinosaur National Monument one of the most sought-after river permits in the American
West.Upstream, the Class IV Cross Mountain-Gorge and the whitewater playpark in Steamboat provide
other valuable resources for paddlers. As a recreational resource, it supports canoe, SUP and
kayak schools, commercial rafting operations, fishing concessions, and even a thriving tubing
business.
The threat: The Yampa has long been a target of diversion proposals that would
pipe water across the continental divide to supply the state’s rapidly growing Front Range
cities. Though there are no immediate plans for large-scale diversions (like the infamous Echo
Park Dam), the population of Colorado is projected to double by 2050, bringing with it an
increased demand for water. The Yampa has far less water storage in the form of reservoirs than
other Colorado River tributaries; it is likely to see new proposals for dams and diversion in
coming decades. A new Colorado River basin management plan is slated for release this December
and river advocacy groups are calling for Yampa River protection to be built into the plan.
“The unanswered question among water experts is whether the Yampa will be tapped to meet
the rest of the state’s water needs,” says AW member Kent Vertrees, a raft guide and
recreation representative of the Yampa/White/Green River Roundtable, which recommends management
plans for the basin. “You have to wonder how long it will be before a trans-mountain
diversion is proposed. All things are pointing that way with drought and growth and the knowledge
that there’s a supply gap.”
Every Tuesday for the next ten weeks, a threatened river will be featured on www.CanoeKayak.com
as we count down towards the announcement of the world’s most endangered run on April 21,
2015.
Zak Podmore
zpodmore@enthusiastnetwork.com
(970) 319-8229
www.CanoeKayak.com