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12/20/05

BOTH GOT COWS

HI GLEN,

JUST WANTED TO LET YOU KNOW MY SON JERRY AND HIS WIFE BOTH GOT COWS IN AREA 83 OR IN THE SAQUACHE AREA. GOT THEM SATURDAY AFTERNOON.

DONNIE

12/14/05

HE KILLED A SIX BY SIX BULL


GLEN JUST WANTED TO LET YOU KNOW THAT KENNY CALLED BOBBY SAID HE KILLED A SIX BY SIX BULL AND SAYS ITS THE BIGGEST ELK HE HAS EVER KILLED SAYS HE WILL SEND PICTURES. SWEDE GOES INTO SURGERY ON THE 26 AGAIN FOR COLON CANCER GUESS IT CAME BACK STAY IN TOUCH DONNIE

MAJESTIC RAM DIES OF NATURAL CAUSES


"This old guy is one for the record books," said Allen Vitt, a terrestrial biologist from Pueblo. "Based on the initial measurements, the ram will score among the largest in the world." Click for DOW News Release: News - Department of Natural Resources

For more information about Division of Wildlife go to: http://wildlife.state.co.us.

Tarryall Reservoir: "There is 11 inches of solid ice

Dentry: Safety always main concern as ice anglers begin season
Rocky Mountain News - Denver,CO,USA
... Blue Mesa Reservoir: Colorado's largest reservoir ... Tarryall Reservoir: "There is 11 inches of solid ice, and people are having good luck," said Jeff Spohn ...

12/8/05

Six Point Bull Elk



In a message dated 12/7/2005 11:17:48 AM Mountain Standard Time, Bigdoccop@#$%^% Writes:


HI GLEN HOPE YOU ARE WARM ARE YOU HOME OR STILL IN THE HILLS. JERRY AND HIS WIFE GOT BACK FROM SAGUACHE OKAY BUT WITH NO ELK. SAID THEY DID NOT GET THE SNOW THAT WAS FORECAST BUT ALSO NO ELK HE SAID THEY SAW ELK EVERYDAY BUT NOT CLOSE ENOUGH TO GET A SHOT. ANY NEWS FROM THE 501 AREA. ALSO HAVE YOU HEARD ANY NEWS ON SWEDE WE HEARD HE WAS IN THE HOSPITAL GOING UNDER THE KNIFE. STAY IN TOUCH DONNIE

Donnie,

Talked to Kenney last night and he said Swede's operation for the colon problem has been rescheduled for the 16th. He's sure had his share of trouble the last few years, but he's hanging in there and talking about going hunting with Kenney.

Kenney got a six point bull just north of Hanna, has a permit for a cow in another area.

Seen lot of elk in Tarryall. One herd was on the ranch land off of the LP Road, a couple guys shot a cow and the game Warden was following them back to the road in his truck, the Warden had the cow in back of his truck and must have taken the hunters gun's also. The Game Warden made them walk back and met them on the LP Road. You can see the two guys in one of the photos I posted on the blog
Tarryall Elk Camp . The quality of the photo is not very good, but the best I could do, I counted over 30 head of bulls in that herd, including the spikes. You can click on the picture to enlarge or copy it.

That area south and west of FR 130 off of the LP Road is a hot area. Big camp in that area last year by the springs. The herd I seen this year that was on the Columbine ranch went on around the ranch on the North side. They most likely went back up in the Johnson Gulch area, seen four head coming down off the hill in the first draw east of FR130 and north of the LP Road. Some guys had taken off after them and most likely ran the elk back over the hill to Johnson gulch, I was by myself and in no shape go after them.


Glenn

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TWO BEAR CUBS RELEASED BACK INTO WILD

Two bear cubs, captured last summer after their mother was killed, were released back into the wild north of Pagosa Springs on Nov. 30 by the Colorado Division of Wildlife (DOW).











Click to see News Release:
News - Department of Natural Resources bears

For more information about Division of Wildlife go to: http://wildlife.state.co.us/

12/5/05

Jim Fagerstrom is on a mission: to preserve the outhouses behind the old Tarryal


Headlines OTHER HEADLINES
December 05, 2005

Sitting on history

Jim Fagerstrom is on a mission: to preserve the outhouses behind the old Tarryall School on County Road 77 in Park County. He says the outhouses are historical and could be used by tourists and bicyclists who travel the road.




By DEEDEE CORRELL, THE GAZETTE

TARRYALL - They’re just shacks, tiny, weather-beaten sheds with protruding nails and tilting walls that stubbornly stand along County Road 77 in Park County.

You see a pair of dilapidated outhouses. Jim Fagerstrom sees privies with a proud past — and a promising future.

“They are masterpieces,” Fagerstrom said. Then he rapidly ticks off the reasons why:

They were built in 1940 by the Works Progress Administration and are still standing.

They have ventilation systems that pipe out foul odors with such efficiency that Fagerstrom marvels: “There’s so much thought put into that.”

One even has a latch that holds up the wooden seatcover when a visitor needs it out of the way.

“This is classic,” said the gray-bearded, plaid-clad Brooklyn native who moved to Colorado 30 years ago and runs the Ute Trail River Ranch down the road.

Is it any wonder that Fagerstrom has made it his business to preserve these oldtime privies and get them back into working order so the public can continue to enjoy them for years to come?

Not to his significant other, Debra Baxter, who chuckles and says he’s always had a strong interest in historic preservation.

Did he mention, she adds, that they have their own outhouse, a two-seater of unknown vintage?

To be sure, the overall job for the county’s historic preservation committee to which Fagerstrom belongs is not only to preserve these outhouses but the 84-year-old schoolhouse to which they belong. They’re also trying to figure out how the public can best use them, Park County Commissioner Jim Gardner says.

The Tarryall School, with its badly chipped walls, sits empty along the county road; behind it, the two outhouses stand as miniature sentries, neglected and mostly unused since the school closed in 1949.

Driving back and forth, Fagerstrom developed a particular fondness for the property and its potties.

How wonderful, he thought, if they could persuade people to visit this place, indulge in a bit of history. And if the school is worth saving, surely so are its toilets.

“They’re as significant as the school itself,” Fagerstrom said.

Indeed, a historic assessment found them to be “excellently preserved examples” of the 2.3 million privies built by the WPA in the 1930s.

Regardless of whether the schoolhouse ever opens to visitors, the outhouses should be utilized again, Fagerstrom says.

“It’s preservation with purpose,” he said.

Fagerstrom would like to see County Road 77 used more — by cyclists, hikers and people just wanting to see more of Park County.

And if people use the road, they ought to have a place to stop, he reasons.

“What if they’re coming and nothing’s built — there’s not even a place to go to the bathroom?” he said.

This year, Fagerstrom persuaded a Buena Vista company, Valley Precast Inc., to donate the construction of a $600, 1,000-gallon concrete vault over which the outhouses could sit.

It was an unusual request, but that comes with the territory, says president Derrick Eggleston.

“I guess we’ve learned not to find a whole lot of things odd,” he said.

Technically, the outhouses are usable now, but the deposits a visitor might make merely fall into the hole and lay there.

In October, Fagerstrom and others lifted one of the outhouses and planted it over the vault.

The other remains in its original spot, the walls listing to one side. Fagerstrom wants to move that one too, then refinish both, replacing loose nails, repainting them and generally getting them into working order by spring.

As for pumping out the tank?

“I’ll probably do it,” he said.

Fagerstrom always takes the approach of “if you want it done right, you do it yourself,” Gardner said. “He’s a one-man whirlwind.”

It will be worth the work, Fagerstrom said: “I think people will enjoy this.”

Rumor has it that state Rep. Michael Merrifield, D-Manitou Springs, already does.

“Mike Merrifield bikes this road. He uses these outhouses,” Fagerstrom alleged.

Contacted at his Manitou Springs home, Merrifield initially denies the “charge.”

“Are you talking about the little white schoolhouse? With a couple of outhouses? I’ve never used them,” he said coyly. “I’ve looked inside them. Just out of curiosity. I can’t attest as to the quality or usability.”

As a former teacher, he says, he found the schoolhouse fascinating.

“I guess if I had used them, I would keep it a secret,” he said.

But preservation is a worthy goal, Merrifield adds.

“More power to him,” he said of Fagerstrom.

Ninety-year-old Jack Smith, who once used those very outhouses as a boy attending the Tarryall School, approves of Fagerstrom’s goal, although he wonders whether people these days are willing to use an outhouse.

“I don’t suppose they do,” he said regretfully.

CONTACT THE WRITER: 636-0285 or

deedee.correll@gazette.com

HOW TO HELP

To assist with preservation efforts, call Jim Fagerstrom at 719-748-3015. To make a donation toward the overall preservation project, contact the nonprofit Coalition for the Upper South Platte at 719-748-0033.