FOLBR - Friends Of the Lower Blue River

  • The Blue River Valley

    The Blue River Valley

    Meanders down the highway 9 corridor, North of Silverthorne

  • Beautiful Colorado

    Beautiful Colorado

    Education, Collaboration & Community Involvement.

  • Environmental Integrity

    Environmental Integrity

    Promoting the safety for residents, livestock & wildlife.

  • Unspoiled National Forest

    Unspoiled National Forest

    Maintaining the rural character, quality of life, and the environment.

  • Our Mission

    Our Mission

    To protect the traditional agricultural character of the Valley.

  • The Blue River Valley
  • Beautiful Colorado
  • Environmental Integrity
  • Unspoiled National Forest
  • Our Mission

Friends Of The Lower Blue River

A volunteer group promoting quality of life, and the
environment of the Lower Blue River Valley.

About FOLBR

The Friends of the Lower Blue River are dedicated to sustaining and protecting the traditional agricultural character, promoting the safety of the residents, livestock and wildlife, and maintaining the environmental integrity of the Lower Blue River Valley through education, collaboration and community involvement.

Mission

To sustain and protect the traditional agricultural character, promote the safety of the residents, livestock and wildlife, and maintain the environmental integrity of the Lower Blue River Valley through education, collaboration and community involvement.

History Story Map

Friends of the Lower Blue River is committed to preserving the rich history of the Blue River Valley. Through grant support from the Summit Foundation, we have created this interactive tool that documents and takes you to key points of interest in the Valley. You will see photographs and read about those who came before us. Those who settled this pristine area of Summit and Grand Counties in the 1800’s and the relevance those sites have today. FOLBR invites you to take this journey on our website and discover the treasure, that truly is the Lower Blue River Valley.

Click Here to see History Story Map

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DOWNLOAD Livestock Emergency Preparedness Program

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Climate Action Blog

Discovering the Benefits of Beaver in the Lower Blue

A beaver surveying a calm pond

Friends of the Lower Blue River is currently studying the benefits of beaver in the Valley. We are undertaking a stream assessment initiative this summer. Director of Climate Action, Tom Koehler is currently surveying areas of the Lower Blue for potential ecological wetland uplift. He is using a mosaic of mapping tools to indicate where beaver have been, where they might currently exist and where uplifts have the potential to increase species diversity, including beaver in the future. The benefits include, drought resiliency as well as vegetative health for wildlife, stream bank stability and environmental health, such as clean water.

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Wetlands for Climate Resiliency

Example of a Beaver Dam Analog

Last month, our Wetlands for Wildlife project, funded and sponsored by Colorado Parks and Wildlife, took real steps forward. We began ground operations along with Ecometrics, uplifting previously modest wetlands, implementing beaver dam analogs as a natural climate solutions tool within our Climate Resilience Initiative. This process allows the stream to expand following historical flows, enhancing biodiversity, mitigating drought impacts and promoting healthy wildlife habitat. 

The next phase of this project is already underway creating Geographic Information System (GIS) mapping designs. We are also working to develop field verification teams this autumn to examine the natural intricacies of streams. Next spring, we will continue this work throughout more of the Lower Blue River Valley.

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Climate Resiliency Update


We have worked to secure funding from Colorado Parks and Wildlife for our Dynamic Wetlands Wildlife Initiative. In the weeks ahead, through the summer and fall, our partner EcoMetrics will be treating 37 acres on private property with Beaver Dam Analogs (manmade structure which mirror beaver dam construction) for biodiversity, habitat for species and carbon capture. 

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Whats Happening Blog

Water in the West on September 18th

This is our final Water in the West Social of the summer! This is a social series in collaboration with FDRD, HC3, BRWG, and FOLBR. This month, Friends of the Lower Blue River will be leading the social.

In the face of climate change, we are all concerned about the scarcity of water. This is especially true for the Blue River Valley. The Blue River is a source of water for 40 million people in the Colorado River System. We invite you to join Friends of the Lower Blue River for an evening exploring the history and development of Colorado's most precious natural resource: our water. How can we preserve this important resource for future generations? How do we deal with the challenges facing us in a changing climate?

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Meet New FOLBR Board Member Nancy Lippe

                            Nancy Lippe

Nancy has dedicated her career to learning, teaching, leading, and innovating in the education and community sectors. As a philanthropy advisor with PhilanthropyConnect, she understands the challenges and opportunities not only of being a grant seeker, but also a grant maker. Nancy has run numerous community based programs and initiatives, and taught philanthropy to youth, teens, families, college students, and adults.

She has served on numerous nonprofit boards, and has been a site evaluator for the National Endowment for the Humanities. Nancy has been a member of the Summit Foundation's Executive Volunteers Corps and the Summit County Arts Forum. She and her family own Columbine Ranch on Harrigan Creek in Silverthorne, growing mountain horse hay for local horse owners.

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Sam Kirk FOLBR's 2024 Recipient of the Founders Award

080424_Sam_Kirk_Founders_Award.jpg

                                       Sam Kirk

Congratuations to outgoing Board President Sam Kirk named FOLBR's 2024 Founders Award Recipent. Thank you Sam for all your support and ciommitment to the Lower Blue River Valley.

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Beyond The Trails Blog

Celebrate the 60th Anniversary of the Wilderness Act!

President Lyndon Johnson signs the Wilderness Act into Law

On September 3, we celebrate the 60th anniversary of the Wilderness Act! Our congressionally designated Wilderness Areas are the most protected public lands in the United States, with wild land ecosystems providing for wildlife and spectacular native plants. We are so fortunate to have the Eagles Nest Wilderness on the west side of the Lower Blue River Valley and Ptarmigan Wilderness on the east side. Wilderness Areas are protected by law preventing any “permanent installation,” or building roads or using any mechanized, wheeled and motorized equipment.

Wilderness Areas are unique. Only a tiny 2.7% of the United States is designated Wilderness. These areas are preserved “in their natural condition… where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man, where man himself is a visitor who does not remain.” Eagles Nest Wilderness was established by Congress in 1978. The Ptarmigan was established in 1993.

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The Downside with the Electric Car Indistry

The Downside with the Electric Car Indistry

By: Wyatt Myskow
Inside Climate News

Lithium needed for batteries that power electric vehicles and store electricity from renewable energy projects is likely to deplete—and in some cases, contaminate—local water supplies, according to a new paper recently published. 

From mining the mineral to processing it for battery use, water is essential for producing the soft, silvery metal with superior ability to hold a charge. With lithium demand rising as the world pivots away from the fossil fuels, researchers are increasingly scrutinizing the environmental impacts of extracting and using the mineral critical to the energy transition. 

The new paper, titled Lithium and Water: Hydrosocial Impacts Across the Life Cycle of Energy Storage, is designed as a primer for community members, activists and other researchers about lithium’s impact on water supplies. It makes the situation clear—lithium products, across their entire life cycle, will have “impacts on both the quantity and quality of water resources” that will primarily affect communities already on the front lines of climate change.

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Carbon Offsets

 The carbon offset market has been damage recently, bringing some real doubt to its legitimacy. First, it’s important to understand the intent of these offsets is to better gauge the legitimacy of the market moving forward.

Voluntary carbon markets exist for companies and other buyers to purchase carbon credits. The credits offset their emissions and can be used to attempt to achieve “net zero” targets. A lot of these are forest based. Some believe the carbon capturing attributes of the forest or other landscapes can offset a company’s emissions.

With pressure from political, environmental and shareholder activists, companies found themselves bolstering sustainability efforts and even touting ambitious net-zero goals. Reducing emissions can be difficult both on an operational level and throughout a company’s supply chain.

Offset markets were thought to be a large part of the answer, to achieve the somewhat misleading net-zero pledge. Companies began purchasing them and for a while, the market was booming as the price of carbon credits increased.

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Our Sponsors

  • GOCO Rio Blanco Herald Times
  • Zeal Optics
  • Town Of Silverthorne
  • CPW Logo
  • Copper Mountain
  • Down River Equipment
  • E-J LLC
  • Home Breckenridge Grand Vacations Gives
  • Buffalo Mountain Animal Hospital
  • California Wine Club
  • Alpine Bank
  • Arapahoe Basin
  • The Summit Foundation
  • Fish Pond
  • Summit County Logo
  • Alpine Earth Gardens
  • Mountain Angler