Garrett and Cailin Portra own Carlson Vineyards, a winery perched on the banks of the mighty Colorado River in Palisade, CO. They use river delivered water to make delicious and distinctive wines, so they’re working to make sure the Colorado River stays healthy for their business, family and community. How? By doing what they love, making wine. They’ve crafted a delightful red and white to raise funds for nonprofits working on clean water and healthy rivers.
Since, they know that a bottle of wine is not complete without a good pairing, they partnered with Derek DeYoung to design the label. Derek is a world famous artist and prolific fly fisherman. His arthouse, DeYoung Studios, works with organizations across the country to support healthy rivers and promote fly fishing. DeYoung lent designs from his ‘Cubist Cutthroat’ series to create two keepsake worthy labels that compliment the custom wine blends.
When you purchase these wines, you are supporting healthy rivers. Proceeds go straight to our grants program, funding organizations working to improve river health across the Southwest. In 2020, this partnership helped us grant nearly $25,000 to some of the hardest working nonprofits in the Colorado River Basin.
We’re excited to continue this partnership with Carlson Vineyards and DeYoung Studios in 2021 with a new wine vintage. Proceeds will improve access to healthy rivers for communities of color and underserved communities in the Southwest. We amplify the impact of this philanthropic wine pairing by matching it with funds from other business partners that believe Our Rivers are for all.
Join the movement! Buy some wine. Carlson Vineyards sells the Forever Our Rivers Red and White wines at their winery in Palisade and their tasting room in Grand Junction. You can also order them online. Prints of the DeYoung art are also available for purchase. Follow Carlson Vineyards, DeYoung Studios and Forever Our Rivers on Instagram and Facebook.
Paddlers and other river recreationalists are often the first to experience the threats rivers face like trash and plastic pileups, poor water quality and river access challenges. That’s why SOL Paddle Boards was an early champion of the healthy rivers movement, joining forces with Forever Our Rivers in late 2019.
SOL designs their high quality paddle boards in Telluride, Colorado at the headwaters of the stunning San Miguel River. The San Miguel flows into the Dolores and then on to the Colorado. All three are rivers we’re working to protect and restore.
SOL’s owner, Johnny Lombino, is a talented and passionate paddler. He brings ingenuity and enthusiasm to the movement to connect people to healthy rivers and waterways. Johnny wants to make access easier, which is why SOL builds and sells adaptive paddle boards and gives a portion of his profits to our grant program.
“We got involved with Forever Our Rivers because their river stewardship, grants and partnerships in the west are great for river communities,” says Lambino. “Rivers are ours to take care of and as a proud supporter of Forever Our Rivers, we want to increase awareness of the issues and care for the rivers around us.”
This year, funds from SOL will help improve access to healthy rivers among communities of color and underserved communities, like people with disabilities, women, and lower income neighborhoods. We’re growing Jonny’s contributions by matching it with those from other companies that believe Our Rivers are for all.
Join the movement. Buy a SOL paddle board or inner tube. Follow SOL Paddle Boards and Forever Our Rivers on Instagram and Facebook. And tag us in your river pics #paddlewithsol #solpaddleboards #ourrivers #foreverourrivers #weareforrivers
Forever Our Rivers Foundation (FOR) awarded $25,000 in grants this Friday to organizations connecting communities to their rivers. This grant cycle focused on improving river health in the southwest through projects ranging from stream habitat improvement and maintenance to engaging youth in education and providing public access to waterways.
The ten projects funded
are largely run by organizations based in Colorado but include regional efforts
from organizations such as Brown Folks Fishing and Casting for Recovery. “Our foundation
is committed to engaging communities to enjoy, conserve and protect our rivers,”
says Forever Our Rivers Executive Director Joe Neuhof. “We have a growing network
of River Health Partners, centered in Colorado and working out into the West and
eventually the nation.
Our goal is to raise over
5 million dollars over the next 5 years by helping our Corporate
Partners and their customers
support clean water and healthy rivers. That money will fund boots‐on-the-ground
nonprofits, which are key to getting rivers healthy and keeping them that way.”
Forever Our Rivers’ funding
program is one-of‐a-kind, bringing businesses and nonprofits together to help make
rivers and communities healthier. With ongoing support from the Walton Family Foundation,
dozens of corporate partners, and a network of over 25 nonprofits, the foundation
is growing quickly and earning some high-profile praise.
“We are proud to support
and partner with the Forever Our Rivers Foundation in developing a sustainable river
funding model,” says Peter Skidmore with Walton Family Foundation. “The Forever
Our Rivers Model is the best bet to provide reliable and sustainable funding, as
public and philanthropic sources often do not meet long‐term needs to protect and
restore healthy rivers.”
Organizations funded include: Brown Folks Fishing, Casting for Recovery, Colorado West Land Trust, Four Corners Water Center, Friends of Youth & Nature, Institute for Environmental Solutions, Purgatoire Watershed Partnership, Roaring Fork Conservancy, San Juan Citizens Alliance, and River Science.
Forever Our Rivers Foundation works with companies to support organizations and communities working to enhance river health. One of these companies, PrairieFood, has developed an innovative technology that treats feedlot wastes for use by farmers to improve soil health and agricultural productivity while reducing nutrient loads in waterways. They asked us an interesting question: How are all the closed restaurants, bars, and brew-pubs going to dispose of all of the keg beer that goes bad during Covid-19 closures? Canned or bottled beer normally has a shelf life of several months, and a lot of it is standing by in breweries, distributors, and your favorite local haunts.
Historically, excess beer, milk, or other food
waste was often dumped directly into rivers. Such practices are really bad for
rivers and are now illegal. Beer can decimate water quality. The bacteria that
grow to decompose, i.e. feed on, the beer demands so much oxygen that they use
it all up, leading to fish kills. It’s hard to believe, but beer needs around
250 times more oxygen to decompose than raw untreated municipal wastewater,
what some call sewage.
In normal
times, restaurants and breweries know what to do with excess beer. They work
with the local wastewater treatment facility and state agencies to decide on
how to dispose of it. It may be to stage incremental disposal for larger
volumes to prevent overloading treatment centers or to send it to a specialized
disposal facility. In some states, beer can be sprayed directly onto
agricultural land, used as an amendment for composting facilities, or, more
recently, used to make hand sanitizer.
For these less-than-normal times, the Brewers Association created a great resource for breweries, restaurants, bars, and distributors in an updated version of their Best Practices for Responsible Disposal of Beer
Since milk is just as hard on rives as beer
is, there are best practices for dairy farms too. Help us out, buy keg beer
from your favorite local breweries in growlers when possible.