A spat brewing between anglers and a landowner over a natural water channel connecting Pine Creek and the New Fork River near Pinedale could reflect a growing trend of tension between landowners and floaters across Wyoming.
âItâs symbolic of greater issues,â legendary Wyoming fly fisherman and outdoor businessman Jack Dennis told Cowboy State Daily.Â
âThe River Broke Throughâ
A Jackson native, Dennis now spends most of his time in the Pinedale area and has floated and fished on the New Fork River there since the early 1960s.Â
Downstream from the area in question, Pine Creek flows into the New Fork River, which in turn flows into the Green River.Â
âThe (New Fork) river broke through and went into Pine Creek about 20-some years ago,â he said.
The breakthrough was along two natural channels about 400 yards apart a few miles southeast of Pinedale.Â
Both channels cut through private property. In Wyoming, itâs legal to float through private property on any navigable waterway.Â
But getting out of a watercraft and wading, with oneâs feet touching the streambed, is considered trespassing.Â
One of the channels is thick with willows, Dennis said. He and some friends went through once years ago, but it was so much work, they never tried again.Â
The other channel is wider and easier to get through and has seen regular use from floaters, he said.Â
The property that channel cuts through has changed hands a few times over the decades, with the latest owner buying it a few years ago, Dennis said.Â
Now, some locals are claiming that the latest owner â officially listed as the Florida-based River Ranch LLC â has been trying to block the channel with rocks and soil.Â
Thatâs raised the ire of many local anglers and fishing guides, Dennis said. Â
It could also raise sticky issues with wider implications of what constitutes a ânavigableâ waterway, and what rights landowners have to control boat traffic, build fences across channels and the like.
The central question might be whether Pine Creek, flowing through private property is a bona fide navigable waterway â particularly since itâs taking in water from the New Fork River through the channel, Dennis said.Â
He's long been closely involved in access and conservation policy issues.Â
He said that even such thing as changes in popular watercraft can complicate matters.
âKayakers and small boat users have taken it to mean that literally anything you can put those boats into is a ânavigable waterway,ââ he said.Â

Corps Of Engineers Looking Into ItÂ
The Army Corps of Engineers has primary jurisdiction over the waterways in question.Â
The Corpsâ Wyoming Regulatory Office on June 2 received a report of work being done on the channel, Nathan Morey, the agencyâs South Dakota-Wyoming section chief, told Cowboy State Daily in an email.Â
âWe are currently gathering information to determine if the work is subject to the Corpsâ regulatory authorities under Section 404 of the Clean Water Act,â Morey wrote. âThe Corps of Engineers is responsible for issuing permits for activities that place fill material (e.g., soil, rock, etc.) into waters of the United States such as Pine Creek and its abutting wetlands.â
During a phone interview early Friday, Morey said the Corpsâ primary concern is any possible âdischarge of fill materialâ into the channel from work that might be being done there.Â
âWeâre focused on the discharge of fill and its effects,â Morey said.Â
In such cases, whether fill is blocking a navigable waterway could be taken into account as a possible effect, he said.
Fences And WaterwaysÂ
Dennis said that when he first started floating in the area, the Maytag family owned the property where the channels are, and he had permission from them to cross the land.Â
Later, two oil companies owned the land in succession before it was sold to the current owners, he said.Â
At one point, a wire fence was put across the channel, he said.Â
According to his understanding of access laws, landowners are allowed to put fences across channels if itâs necessary to contain livestock, Dennis said.Â
The wire fence across the channel was built in such a manner that it could be taken down to allow a boat to pass and then put back up.Â
âThe respectful floaters always made sure to put the fence back up when they passed through,â Dennis said.Â
He said that to his knowledge, the fence is no longer there.Â
Dennis said heâs not sure what will result from the brewing dust-up over the channel between Pine Creek and the New Fork River.Â
It hasnât dampened his love for the area, however.Â
âIâve fished all over the world,â he said. âAnd still, to this day, the New Fork River in Wyoming is my favorite.â
Contact Mark Heinz at mark@cowboystatedaily.com

Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.





