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  2. History. The river is a popular summer destination for fly fishing, whitewater rafting, tubing, and kayaking in the Poudre Canyon. The river has been substantially populated since the 1930s by year-round residences.

    • Colorado
  3. National Heritage Area History. The Cache la Poudre River, the heart of the National Heritage Area, is a working river essential to the lives of the more than a half-million people in its Basin. Originating among the Rocky Mountains and dropping some 7,000 feet to the Great Plains, the Cache la Poudre River is relatively short —125 miles from ...

  4. Indigenous people relied on the Cache la Poudre for thousands of years, from the ancient Paleo-Indians who left scattered remains at the Lindenmeier Folsom site to the Ute and Arapaho people who met the first Europeans and Anglo-Americans.

  5. Was "Cache La Poudre" the original name of our local river that flows through downtown Fort Collins? Summarized by Rheba Massey . There have been several names for the Cache La Poudre River according to sources in the Fort Collins Local History Archive. The earliest name was Pateros Creek.

  6. Apr 6, 2021 · The Cache la Poudre River is essential to the lives of the more than a half-million people in the northern Colorado Front Range and is the heart of the National Heritage Area. View irrigation ditches and canals built in the late 1800s by early settlers, many of which are still in use today.

  7. The river eventually passes through the city of Fort Collins, then joins the South Platte River east of Greeley. Historical accounts trace the name for the Cache la Poudre River to early French trappers who were caught in a snowstorm and buried their gunpowder in a cache near the mouth of the river.

  8. The Cache la Poudre River National Heritage area extends for 45 miles and includes the lands within the 100-year flood plain of the Cache la Poudre River. It begins in Larimer County at the eastern edge of the Roosevelt National Forest and ends east of Greeley, ¼ miles west of the confluence with the South Platte.

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