Submitted by Brett.Prettyman on Fri, 2016-09-09 12:34 Conservation West of The Rockies Yellowstone Fly Fishing High Desert Anglers - 620 Wyoming Flycasters - 605 Southern Nevada - 686 Weber Basin Anglers - 681 Stonefly Society - 048 Wyoming At-Large - 748 Seedskadee - 533 Utah At-Large - 753 Nevada - 9NV Wyoming - 9WY Greater Yellowstone Area The Front Porch Trout & Salmon in the Classroom (TIC/SIC) Trout Magazine Utah - 9UT Wyoming Range Outdoor Communicators Vote Up Down +108 + 26 in BCT w fly rod.JPG Paul Thompson holds a Bear River cutthroat caught at Bear Lake. Courtesy of Paul Thompson. By Paul Thompson My love of native cutthroat trout began in 1992 when I moved from the Midwest to begin a Master's Degree at the University of Wyoming . My graduate project allowed study of the beautiful Colorado River cutthroat trout as well as exploring some amazing country throughout Wyoming. It wasn't long before I knew that I wouldn't be heading back to the Midwest after I finished my education. While working in the Wyoming Range I was mentored by the Pinedale Regional Fisheries Supervisor, Ron Remmick of Wyoming Game and Fish. Ron dedicated his career to native cutthroat trout conservation and his enthusiasm continued to fuel my love for cutthroat trout. We had many great conversations standing at the tailgate of his truck after a long day electrofishing. Ron really wanted to get the angling public more excited, educated and involved in native cutthroat trout conservation. So in 1996, about a year after I had begun working for the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources, I was not surprised to hear he and Wyoming Game and Fish Department had initiated the first ever fish slam - the Wyoming Cutt Slam. The Slam is one of Ron's greatest legacies for native cutthroat trout. It is unfortunate cancer took him before he could fully understand its impact within Wyoming and, ultimately, the entire West. Jacob's Creek fluvial BCT_Lower Weber River project sampling.jpg Paul Thompson holds a Bonneville cutthroat trout - the state fish of Utah. Courtesy Paul Thompson. In the mid 1990s, as a young biologist working for the UDWR, I was still feeling my way along on how my career would ultimately progress. When a cutthroat trout biologist job opened in northern Utah, I put everything I had into getting that position. I did land my dream job working on native cutthroat trout as well as other native, largely unknown aquatic species, in northern Utah. There are many streams in northern Utah and I had my work cut out for me. At that point, the UDWR really didn't have a good grasp on where native cutthroat trout occurred in my region so I spent several years surveying streams to find populations and document the extent of occupied habitat as well as threats to populations. I spent two months in 1999 surveying Chalk Creek (Bonneville cutthroat trout) and the Logan River (Bear River cutthroat trout) drainages and documenting cutthroat trout in more than 100 miles and another 60 miles between the two drainages. I also surveyed many of the drainages on the North Slope of the Uinta Mountains looking for and finding Colorado River cutthroat trout. In 2001, I researched our records for the Raft River Range in the northwestern corner of the state, where we have native Yellowstone cutthroat trout. The UDWR hadn't been out to that country to look for Yellowstone cutthroat for more than 20 years and our records didn't paint a very good picture that subspecies of cutthroat trout still existed in Utah. After a month of hiking and electrofishing, I discovered that Utah still had six drainages with Yellowstone cutthroat and further genetic analyses indicated that at least a portion of the fish in five of those drainages were pure Yellowstone cutthroat (e.g., not introgressed with rainbow trout or other cutthroat trout). Paul Thompson Yellowstone.jpg The Yellowstone cutthroat Paul Thompson caught and submitted to complete his second Utah Cutthroat Slam. About a decade of my career has been dedicated to surveying and documenting where native cutthroat trout still persist in northern Utah. More recently, my office has shifted our focus to the protection of critical cutthroat trout populations, restoring populations where they have been lost, and reconnecting habitat to allow cutthroat trout to fulfill their life history needs. My love of cutthroat trout has definitely spilled over to my passion - fly fishing. These fish have taken me across the West and to date, I have angled Colorado River, Bonneville, Bear River, Yellowstone, West slope, coastal, greenback, Lahontan (and if you are a splitter - also Humboldt), Rio Grande, and Paiute cutthroat trout in their native ranges. Angling these beautiful fish and other native trout species has allowed me to appreciate the diversity of Western trout and the issues other states are facing in their native trout conservation efforts. Ultimately, however, one of the greatest outcomes from these travels is the relationships built with other biologists that share my passion for native trout. Through my career, I have attempted to promote a native cutthroat trout slam within the UDWR a couple of times. Unfortunately, everyone is busy (including myself) and while there was interest in getting a slam going in Utah, we could never really get the momentum to initiate the program. I was extremely excited when Brett Prettyman recently joined forces with Trout Unlimited and had the same vision regarding a Utah Cutthroat Slam. Having TU as a partner generated enough momentum that the Division of Wildlife Resources knew the time was right to work with a partner and roll out the Slam. The excitement that has been generated by the Utah Cutthroat Slam has exceeded my expectations! By early September, about 600 people have signed up for the slam and more than 70 have completed it. It has been great to talk with anglers on where to catch the four cutthroat trout subspecies and it is even more rewarding when they follow up with me after they complete the slam. Bear River cut.jpg Paul Thompson with a Bear River cutthroat. Courtesy of Paul Thompson. For the most part, everyone has truly enjoyed completing the slam and they feel that the challenge makes the reward that much more enjoyable. One negative on the slam that we've heard is that it would be too hard to complete. The UDWR and TU have information available on where to catch these fish and UDWR biologists are available to discuss angling options. To help address the concern about the difficulty of the slam, two of my co-workers and I put a video together where we completed the Utah Cutthroat Slam in a single day. While this might not be for everyone, it does highlight how achievable the slam can be. I personally have now completed the slam twice. I needed to get two completions so I could frame my certificate and display both sides of the medallion. I have the certificate framed and hanging in my office. Every time I look at it, I smile and feel a great sense of accomplishment not only for completing the challenge, but for the excitement the Utah Cutthroat Slam has generated toward native cutthroat trout in Utah. Paul T framed certificate.jpg Paul Thompson completed the Utah Cutthroat Slam twice so he could display both sides of the medallion in a frame with his completion certificate. I likely will complete the Utah slam several more times in the future and I am already thinking of ways to further challenge myself or make a slam completion more meaningful. I think the next slam I complete will encompass cutthroat trout from streams that I have personally been involved in restoring or protecting for native cutthroat trout. This brings me full circle back to Ron Remmick, who I feel ultimately started cutthroat trout excitement in the West. His contribution with initiating the Wyoming Cutt Slam was truly larger than he would ever realize. Paul Thompson is the Northern Region Aquatic Manager for the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources. He can be reached at paulthompson@utah.gov