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<br />. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />Camping and fishing are the primary recreational uses. Estimated visitor <br />day use for 1974 was 23,950 visitor days, (a visitor day is one person <br />staying 12 hours) up slightly from the 23,260, visitor days estimated <br />in 1973. There are two campgrounds, one boat launching ramp and 50 picnic <br />tables at Taylor Park Reservoir. Fish species in Taylor Park Reservoir <br />include rainbow, brook, brown, cutthroat and mackinaw trout; northern <br />pike; k6kanee salmon; and suckers. Rainbow trout, stocked annually <br />by the Colorado Division of Wildlife, comprise the bulk of the sport <br />fish catch. In 1974 20,000 pounds of catachable rainbow trout and <br />300,000 two inch fingerling rainbow trout were stocked. Kokanee salmon <br />were introduced into a tributary of the reservoir and provided some fish- <br />ery to the reservoir after they moved downstream. <br /> <br />2. Taylor River <br /> <br />The main Taylor River is 20 miles in length located between <br />Taylor Park Dam and Almont, Colorado. The river is characterized by.flows <br />ranging between 0 and 2,270 cfs. It's 6% gradient cause much swift whit2 <br />water. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />The Taylor River immediately downstream of Taylor Park Reservoir <br />has a channel capacity of appro~imately 1,000 cfs without flooding. <br />Highest instantaneous discharge from Taylor Park was 2,270 cfs on <br />July 1, 1957. After Taylor Park Reservoir and before construction of <br />Blue Mesa Reservoir 61 days of flooding occurred during 27 years of <br />records. After completion of Blue Mesa Reservoir even though averag2 <br />yearly discharges from Taylor Park were higher, 8 year average discharge <br />of 150,600 acre-feet, as compared to a 27 year average discharge or <br />141,200 acre-feet before Blue Mesa Reservoir, no days of floodin& have <br />been recorded. <br /> <br />On a number of occassions after construction of Taylor Park Reservoir <br />and before Blue Mesa Reservoir was completed a minimum streamflow of <br />zero was recorded for the Taylor River below Taylor Park Dam. After <br />completion of Blue Mesa Reservoir, 1966-1973, a mimimum daily flow of <br />19 ~fa was recorded. <br /> <br />The Taylor River has had three types of flow patterns in recent <br />history: 1) natural conditions without Taylor Park Reservoir. 2) <br />with Taylor Park Reservoir, and 3) With Taylor Park and Blue Mesa <br />Reservoirs. Average flows for each of these conditions can be seen <br />in Figure (i). Under natural conditions, determined from reservoir <br />inflow data, the highest flows in the Taylor River occurred during <br />the May-June spring runoff period. Low flows occurred from November <br />through March. With just Taylor Park Reservoir operating, peak flow <br />months occurred in August and September and low flows in the same <br />November throuf'h March perold as under natural conditions. But flows <br />during the low flow period averaged less than under natural conditions. <br />