It does look gorgeous Chris, would love to have been there to watch you do your work and shadowed you while you fished...standing well clear of course. Was it Bridges of Madison county that spurred more interest of fly fishing years back where he was standing about casting repeatedly. Guess that works when the fish are running up/down stream feeding as they go...coming to you.
Colorado is beautiful. Lots of people back east who are accustomed to guard rails are a little freaked out by many of the mountain switchback roads that have zero guardrails. Been on a few of them...they make you uneasy when in a vehicle that is a rental and you aren't accustom to it's idiosyncrasies. Drove a Mitsubishi Montero on one trip. Drove into a Rocky Mountain National Park entrance right around dusk and barely missed nailing a herd of caribou deciding it was the time to cross in front of me out of the growing gray. Barely stopped in time. I guess my lighting their path across the road was their signal to go...
Picked up my sister at the airport last year during a light snow storm. She returned from a trip to find a dead battery in her truck. On the way from the airport to her place cutting across a ridge taking back roads to eliminate a 5 mile jog going main roads a herd of 8 deer of various sizes crossed in front of us. I had the fog lights on in the Subaru Outback and saw them in plenty of time. A couple stopped in the road briefly just to look at us 12-15 feet from them... stupid deer.
Coyotes are growing by leap in bounds across the nation...they are smart and in a pack they will take down deer if they can. Was surprised to see one cross the interstate in front of me about 1/2 mile ahead when I was moving back to NE TN back in early 2013. Unmistakable profile and I didn't realize they had grown so widespread in their range. They are very common in the west and frequently seen at night if you are out and about even in the cities, using the washes as their paths into the city at dark.
One of my coworkers had photos of a wildcat/bobcat asleep in his back yard corner beneath a pine tree he had planted. He would get a clue it was around if the cats would refuse to go into the backyard or if they were staring out the windows for long periods of time.
A few even caught photos of cougars in their backyards getting a drink from their pools. That was when I lived in Tucson. Sierra Vista had even more coyotes and scorpions and tarantulas were more common as well as javelina (commonly called... Javelina but, they are actually Collared Peccary.)
https://www.desertmuseum.org/kids/oz/long-fact-sheets/Javelina.php I digress.
By the way, not that I have seen him much around lately but Cal's buddy SoyBoySigh has an account over on the CX/GL 500 forums. I was shocked to see it while over there catching up on a couple threads I was following that had become active again and checking some new ones that piqued my interest. a '78 cx plastic maggot has been one of my rides...