Ted Trueblood Chapter
Conserving, protecting, and restoring Southwest Idaho's coldwater fisheries and their watersheds.

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Postings from the Ted Trueblood Chapter of Trout Unlimited

Boise, Idaho


Archive

Sep
29th
Thu
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Jim Harper is the director of the annual Trout Camp for the Ted Trueblood Chapter.
He is also an artist and his original paintings will be on display at the R. Grey Gallery gallery for the month of October.
There is a meet the artists and treats on First Thursday on October 6th.


R. Grey Gallery
415 S. 8th St.
Boise, Idaho 83702
(208) 385-9337
www.rgreygallery.com

Jim Harper is the director of the annual Trout Camp for the Ted Trueblood Chapter.

He is also an artist and his original paintings will be on display at the R. Grey Gallery gallery for the month of October.

There is a meet the artists and treats on First Thursday on October 6th.

R. Grey Gallery

415 S. 8th St.

Boise, Idaho 83702

(208) 385-9337

www.rgreygallery.com

Sep
27th
Tue
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Idaho TU Bioengineering Workshop

Idaho TU Bioengineering Workshop

Sep
25th
Sun
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Report from the National TU Meeting

Here’s a report, mostly in pictures, from the national Trout Unlimited meeting held in Bend, Oregon September 15-18.  The Ted Trueblood Chapter was represented by President Chris Jones, Treasurer Andy Brunelle, and Board of Directors John Ellsworth, Darryl Kuhrt and Pat Kilroy.

The Chapter won the Silver Trout Award, second place nationally among chapters.  Photo below is Chris Jones giving an acceptance speech.

Chris thanked the national organization for their help, in particular the Boise and Idaho Falls staff who have provided great support to the Chapter and to volunteers around Idaho.

Some fishing photos after the jump.

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Sep
23rd
Fri
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From the Spokesman Review Eye on Boise blog -

Eye On Boise

PETA brings anti-fishing campaign to Idaho

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, or PETA, is bringing its anti-fishing campaign to Boise today, with a noon protest scheduled outside a bait and tackle shop on Vista Avenue, Idaho Angler, to press the group’s current campaign that fishing is cruel. “Parents should get their kids hooked on compassion, not on maiming and killing fish,” said PETA’s Virginia Fort in an announcement of the Boise protest. The group contends that “fish are intelligent, sensitive animals who experience stress and pain when they are cruelly hooked or hauled up from the deep in commercial nets.”

Idaho is known for its fishing, which has a long history and culture in the state; hundreds of thousands of Idahoans hold fishing licenses, according to Idaho Department of Fish & Game records, and more than 100,000 out-of-staters purchased short- or long-term Idaho fishing licenses in 2010.

http://www.spokesman.com/blogs/boise/2011/sep/23/peta-brings-anti-fishing-campaign-idaho/

Sep
22nd
Thu
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Bid opening on the Pierce Creek reconnection project.

Bid opening on the Pierce Creek reconnection project.

Sep
16th
Fri
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Darryl Kuhrt, Chris Jones and Andy Brunelle with the Silver Trout Award for the Ted Trueblood Chapter.  Award given at the national Trout Unlimited meeting in Bend, OR.

Darryl Kuhrt, Chris Jones and Andy Brunelle with the Silver Trout Award for the Ted Trueblood Chapter.  Award given at the national Trout Unlimited meeting in Bend, OR.

Sep
15th
Thu
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Woolly Buggers Meeting September 20

The Woolly Buggers will meet on Tuesday, September 20 at 6:30 p.m. at the Idaho Fish and Game Headquarters Trophy Room.

The program will feature Boise flyfishers’ fishing for the world’s largest salmonid, the Mongolian Taimen.

Sep
11th
Sun
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Trueblood Chapter Meeting Sept. 14

The Ted Trueblood Chapter meets Wednesday, September 14 at the MK Nature Center behind the Idaho Fish and Game Headquarters.

For our program that evening that starts at 7:30 pm we will have Nate Brumley, the owner of Dry Fly Innovations (www.dryflyinnovations.com), an online fishing company out of Meridian, Idaho. DFI specializes in custom dry flies and fishing videos.

Nate is a native Idahoan, born and raised on the Salmon River, and he has dry fly fished the Northwest for over 40 years. That experience has led to the creation of over a hundred unique dry fly patterns that have been tested over some of the smartest fish on the planet with amazing results.

Nate’s presentation, “Season’s of the South Fork” is a unique look at dry fly fishing the South Fork. Hatch charts, cool footage, photos, and awesome dry fly patterns. It will give you the tools to fool a lot of big fish.

 

As usual, we will be meeting at the MK Nature Center, behind the IDFG Headquarters Office, 600 South Walnut. A fly tying session begins at 6:30 pm with the regular meeting/program beginning at 7:30. Hope to see you there.


Sep
2nd
Fri
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Hayfork culvert replacement delivers results

Bull trout are now found in the upper reaches of Mores Creek.  Recent field monitoring found large, migratory fish have passed through the new Hayfork culvert crossing into the upper reaches of the creek.

Back in the middle of last decade the Ted Trueblood Chapter began working in earnest with the Boise National Forest on a number of projects with one emphasis on improving habitat connections by replacing culverts that block fish passage.

A major step forward came with a new, bottomless arch culvert at Roaring River, a tributary to the Middle Fork Boise River, one that opened up several miles of habitat for redband and bull trout.

The Ted Trueblood Chapter put up several thousand dollars from an Embrace a Stream grant for the Roaring River project.  When project bids were made and the work done the Forest was able to cover the costs without the TU contribution.

So with a few thousand dollars burning a hole in our pocket we went looking for another project.  And we found it in the upper reaches of Mores Creek, a stream where TU had been working hard with the Forest, Boise County, and others to restore the floodplain and improve water quality and fish habitat.

The photo above shows the Hayfork culvert and how it inhibits fish passage due to it being perched above the bed of Mores Creek.  The Hayfork Campground is accessed at this crossing, some nine miles upstream of the Idaho City area.

The TU money helped leverage other funding sources and by late summer 2009 the culvert was being pulled (see below) and a new, bottomless arch culvert was put in place (photo at bottom).

The culvert is well up in the Mores Creek watershed.  Aside from Highway 21 running near Mores Creek the area has few roads and in the upper elevation the water is cold: great habitat for bull trout.  Sightings of bull trout have been sparse.  Some reports from 2000 and 2001.  Most of these fish are refugees from the upper Boise River North, Middle and South Forks, but under certain conditions they are entrained and spill from Arrowrock Reservoir into Lucky Peak Reservoir.  Mores Creek is the only perennial, free-clowing stream into Lucky Peak.

Now, two year after the culvert is replaced comes news from the Boise National Forest that on September 1, 2011 the Forest Service electroshocked Mores Creek upstream of Mores Creek.  In a short, 100 meter section of the stream they found five large bull trout.

We congratulate the Boise National Forest for getting this project done and achieving results.

It is results like this that inspire Trout Unlimited members to keep up the efforts to restore America’s streams for cold water fish.