Leadville National Fish Hatchery

Leadville National Fish Hatchery Leadville National Fish Hatchery (LNFH), established in 1889, is the second oldest Federally operated fish hatchery in existence today.

Due to the federal government shutdown, this account is not being actively updated.For more information, please visit:
10/01/2025

Due to the federal government shutdown, this account is not being actively updated.
For more information, please visit:

Operations in the Absence of Appropriations

Hotchkiss NFH, located between Hotchkiss and Delta, Colorado, is hiring for a seasonal (6-10 month) position. Hotchkiss ...
05/10/2025

Hotchkiss NFH, located between Hotchkiss and Delta, Colorado, is hiring for a seasonal (6-10 month) position. Hotchkiss is a small, rural area along the north fork of the Gunnison River and the hatchery annually stocks fish throughout western Colorado and New Mexico.

Seasonal positions provide a great opportunity to learn about hatcheries and get your foot in the door for future positions. Hatcheries are a great career track for people that like biology, working with fish, animal husbandry, fishing, working outdoors, and facilities maintenance.

Please share with anyone that may be interested!

• Job Announcement: TS-25-12733713-LP-DE

• USAJOBS URL: https://www.usajobs.gov/GetJob/ViewDetails/836778500

• Locations Advertised: Hotchkiss, CO; Lakewood, CO; Mora, NM; Saratoga, WY; Whiteriver, AZ.

• Opening Date: Monday, May 12, 2025
• *Closing Date: Friday, May 16, 2025

Contact me if you have any questions.

These positions are Biological Science Technician (Fish), GS- 0404-5. Salary: The salary for each location may vary depending on locality. Locality tables may be found HERE Plea...

May is Wildfire Preparedness Month!Nationally, almost nine out of 10 wildfires are caused by humans. These preventable w...
04/29/2025

May is Wildfire Preparedness Month!

Nationally, almost nine out of 10 wildfires are caused by humans. These preventable wildfires threaten lives, property, and resources. Whether you’re a first-time visitor or a public lands pro, you play a critical role in preventing wildfires.

Follow these tips and share them! You can also help to encourage responsible recreation by spreading the word about how to prevent wildfires.

1. Check weather and drought conditions.

Pay close attention to weather and drought conditions, which can affect how easily vegetation can catch fire.

Avoid any activities that involve fire or sparks when it’s hot, dry, and windy. If the conditions aren’t right, choose non-flammable options. Remember, conditions and local restrictions should guide your decision for any fire-related activity, such as building a campfire, operating equipment outdoors, off-roading on dry grass, or burning debris.

2. Build your campfire in an open location far away from flammable materials.

Many people love to go camping and enjoy the warmth and light from a campfire, but your campfire can cause wildfires if you do not build and extinguish it properly.

To build a safe campfire, make sure you:

Select a flat, open location away from flammable materials, such as logs, brush, or decaying leaves and pine needles.
Scrape away grass, leaves, and needles down to the mineral soil.
Cut wood in short lengths, pile it within the cleared area, and then light the fire.
Stay with your fire.

3. Douse your campfire until it’s cold.

Make sure your campfire is completely out by following these steps:

Douse the fire with at least one bucket of water.
Stir it.
Add another bucket of water.
Stir it again.
Your campfire should be cold to the touch before you leave.

4. Keep vehicles off dry grass.

If you are off-roading, remember that your exhaust can reach temperatures of 1,000+ degrees! To prevent vegetation from igniting into a wildfire, avoid driving or parking on dry grass.

5. Regularly maintain your equipment and vehicle.

6. Practice vehicle safety.
Carry a shovel, bucket, and a fire extinguisher in your vehicle in case you need to put out a fire.

Off-highway vehicles must have a spark arrester. You should also carry a bucket, but you could use a helmet to carry water as an alternative.

7. Check your trailer tires, bearings, and axles.

If you’re towing a trailer, please remember to do a maintenance check to ensure the tires are not worn, the bearings and axles are greased, and the safety chains are properly in place and not dragging on the ground.

8. Keep sparks away from dry vegetation.

Never operate equipment that produces sparks near dry vegetation. Always clear the area around your workspace. This area should be even larger if it is windy and dry.

When operating equipment outside that produces sparks, create clearings where all flammable materials have been removed. The width or radius of the clearing should be 10 to 25 feet, depending on the conditions.

9. Check conditions and regulations before you use fireworks or consider safe alternatives.

Fireworks are illegal on federal lands. They start over 30,000 fires and send more than 10,000 people to the ER each year in the United States.

Check federal, state, county, and city regulations before using fireworks. States, counties, and cities may have different laws and regulations, so a little research could save you the cost of an improper firework use penalty, or worse, the cost of fighting a wildfire.

Consider safe, non-flammable alternatives such as glow sticks or silly string.

10. Burn debris with caution and never when it’s windy or restricted.

Sometimes, people burn trash, leaves, agricultural waste, or other materials.

If you plan to burn debris on your private property, check with your local fire authority to ensure there are no burn bans in your area, make sure you have water nearby (such as a garden hose), and never start a burn if it’s windy.

Once your burn is completed, be sure to mop up the ashes with water and stir all burned material. Wildfires often start from holdover debris piles that were not fully extinguished. This can happen days or even weeks after the debris was burned.

And remember, not all fire is bad!

Extreme wildfires can be devastating, but fire also plays a natural and necessary role in many landscapes.

Fire is vital for some plants and wildlife habitat. The diversity of plants and animals you enjoy on public lands can depend on fire.

Periodic low-intensity fire speeds up the process of forest decomposition, creates open patches for new plants to grow, improves habitat and food for animals, and delivers nutrients to the plants that survive.

The Interior Department uses prescribed fire in various ecosystems to reduce the buildup of vegetation that can fuel catastrophic wildfires. By effectively managing this fuel, we can decrease the risk of extreme fires while enhancing our capacity to safely and efficiently respond to wildfires. This proactive approach allows us to not only protect America's communities but also safeguard businesses, watersheds, and recreational areas that are vital to our nation's economic prosperity.

Have fun, but be fire wise!

Happy birthday to the National Wildlife Refuge System, our sister agency in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service!  122 yea...
03/14/2025

Happy birthday to the National Wildlife Refuge System, our sister agency in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service! 122 years young today!

National wildlife refuges, managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, protect thousands of species and provide access to world-class recreation, from fishing and hunting to wildlife watching and nature photography. On March 14, 1903, President Theodore Roosevelt established the first national wi...

Did you ever want to learn more about the Greenback Cutthroat Trout?  Chris Kennedy and Josh Homer recently sat down for...
03/07/2025

Did you ever want to learn more about the Greenback Cutthroat Trout? Chris Kennedy and Josh Homer recently sat down for an interview with the Fish of the Week team for a podcast to discuss the Greenback Cutthroat.

Give it a listen!

Podcast Episode · Fish of the Week! · 03/03/2025 · 41m

Last week was National Invasive Species Awareness Week, better late than never!  Invasive species are not something to c...
03/03/2025

Last week was National Invasive Species Awareness Week, better late than never! Invasive species are not something to celebrate, but they are something we should all know about and help to prevent.

Coupled with the challenges of climate change, invasive species spread should be a serious concern for everyone. Recognizing a problem is the first step to preventing serious issues, and for many species, the problem was not realized until too late, but there is still hope for the future! We are developing many management strategies to mitigate invasive species proliferation and spread, but prevention is the first line of defense!

Please spread the word, not the w**d!

https://www.doi.gov/blog/invasive-species-finding-solutions-stop-their-spread

https://www.fws.gov/story/2025-02/eat-invaders #:~:text=National%20Invasive%20Species%20Awareness%20Week%20%28Feb.%2024-28%2C%202025%29,native%20wildlife%2C%20destroy%20habitats%2C%20and%20mess%20up%20ecosystems.

No matter where they came from, how they got here or what harm they cause, invasive species are a serious concern.

If you did not have a chance to stop in and see the 150th anniversary quilt, you only have one more day!  We will be pac...
07/16/2024

If you did not have a chance to stop in and see the 150th anniversary quilt, you only have one more day! We will be packing it up tomorrow afternoon to send on to the Aquatic Animal Drug Approval Partnership Program workshop in Bozeman, Mt.

https://www.fws.gov/program/aquatic-animal-health/aquatic-animal-drug-approval-partnership

Thank you Connie Young-Dubovsky for volunteering to design and making the wonderful quilt square for Leadville NFH!

The Aquatic Animal Drug Approval Partnership is a fish medicine research and development program. This small team of research professionals contribute thousands of hours in the lab and field to make sure that fisheries managers across the country have access to a well-stocked fish medicine ch...

We had a great 2 days with almost 150 kids!  It is tiring, but always fun to share some hatchery knowledge with impressi...
07/16/2024

We had a great 2 days with almost 150 kids! It is tiring, but always fun to share some hatchery knowledge with impressionable kids. Who knows, maybe one will return as a hatchery biologist in the future!

07/10/2024
Every now and then you really have to bite the bullet and bear down on work, it can be extremely rough to get up knowing...
07/10/2024

Every now and then you really have to bite the bullet and bear down on work, it can be extremely rough to get up knowing you have to hike 5 miles in the mountains (flowers almost in full bloom) carrying a bag of water containing threatened greenback cutthroat trout to release in a pristine mountain lake. Someone has to do it so we volunteered! Evan and I had the opportunity with over 50 other volunteers to stock two small lakes that had been preparing for their new residents for over ten years. This was one of the first steps to create a wild breeding population in a new drainage. There is currently only one wild breeding population with another that has a single year of reproduction, fingers crossed these lakes prove suitable and we see some offspring in the next few years! There is little suitable habitat to stock these delicate and rare fish but with the efforts of U.S. Forest Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Trout Unlimited, Colorado Parks and Wildlife, National Park Service, and many other valuable volunteers, this project and a few others are just some of the small steps that have been carried out in efforts to recover the greenback cutthroat!

If anyone went from the hatchery up to the Colorado Trail today they may have ran into a strange sight, a group of Fores...
07/03/2024

If anyone went from the hatchery up to the Colorado Trail today they may have ran into a strange sight, a group of Forest Service employees and a llama with some boards strapped to it! The FS is rebuilding a bridge in the Wilderness and the boards proved difficult for people to pack so the aid of a pack llama was enlisted.

The crew is working on the bridge today and should be completed by the 4th if anyone is traveling that way!

For the 150-year anniversary of the US Fish and Wildlife Service's, Commission of Fish and Fisheries, now known as Fish ...
07/01/2024

For the 150-year anniversary of the US Fish and Wildlife Service's, Commission of Fish and Fisheries, now known as Fish and Aquatic Conservation, a quilt was commissioned to celebrate the many hatcheries and stations of the program. Each facility had the opportunity to contribute a square to the project, the result is beautiful and represents the variety of projects represented. The quilt is making a tour of the different facilities and Leadville is its most recent stop! If you have the time, stop in and take a gander, it will only be here until the end of July.

Address

2846 Highway 300
Leadville, CO
80461

Opening Hours

Monday 7:30am - 3:30pm
Tuesday 7:30am - 3:30pm
Wednesday 7:30am - 3:30pm
Thursday 7:30am - 3:30pm
Friday 7:30am - 3:30pm
Saturday 7:30am - 3:30pm
Sunday 7:30am - 3:30pm

Telephone

+17194860189

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