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⚖️Colorado Statutory Framework

Colorado Revised Statutes
CRS § 33-13-101 et seq. — Colorado Boating Safety Act

The Colorado Boating Safety Act establishes mandatory safety standards for watercraft operation on Colorado waters, including personal flotation device (PFD) requirements, registration obligations, operation-under-influence prohibitions, right-of-way rules, and speed restrictions. Compliance is the sole responsibility of the operator. PeakScout condition data, forecasts, and advisories are informational only and do not satisfy any statutory safety obligation imposed on watercraft operators under this Act.

Colorado Revised Statutes
CRS § 33-41-101 et seq. — Colorado Recreational Use Statute

Colorado's Recreational Use Statute limits the liability of landowners (including state and federal agencies) who open their land for recreational use without charge. Under this statute, PeakScout, the Colorado Division of Parks and Wildlife (CPW), the Bureau of Reclamation (BOR), and other land managers are not liable for injuries to recreational users arising from conditions on the property, absent willful or malicious failure to guard against a known dangerous condition. By using PeakScout to access Colorado lakes and water recreation information, you acknowledge the protections this statute extends to information providers and land managers.

Bureau of Reclamation
BOR Facility Regulations — Federal Reservoir Recreation Areas

Major Colorado reservoirs — including Dillon, Blue Mesa, Granby, Pueblo, and others — are managed by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation under federal regulations (43 CFR Part 423). BOR rules govern access, vessel registration, speed limits, campfire restrictions, and fee schedules at federal recreation areas. These regulations supplement Colorado state boating law. PeakScout displays publicly available information about BOR facilities but cannot substitute for the current posted regulations at each facility. Always review current posted regulations upon arrival.

This disclaimer supplements — and does not replace — PeakScout's Federal Land Liability Disclaimer. Both apply when using PeakScout for Colorado lakes and paddling information.

Lightning Risk — Critical Hazard

COLORADO AFTERNOON THUNDERSTORMS ARE THE LEADING CAUSE OF OUTDOOR FATALITY ON OPEN WATER

Colorado's Front Range, high-country reservoirs, and alpine lakes are among the most lightning-prone environments in North America. Convective storms develop with extreme speed — particularly June through August — and regularly strike with no preceding visible cloud build-up at the water surface. Open water is fatal in a lightning event: there is no shelter, your vessel is conductive, and response times in remote lake areas are 30+ minutes.

  • PeakScout forecasts are NOT real-time lightning detection. Weather data updates on scheduled cycles (typically 30–60 minutes). A severe convective cell can develop, track over your location, and discharge within a single forecast update window. Never use PeakScout as a lightning safety tool.
  • The 30/30 rule applies — and then some. If you hear thunder within 30 seconds of a lightning flash, you are already in the strike zone. Get off the water immediately. Do not wait for rain. Colorado storms frequently produce dry lightning ahead of precipitation.
  • High-altitude reservoirs have no escape. Dillon Reservoir (9,017 ft), Turquoise Lake (9,900 ft), Twin Lakes (9,210 ft), and similar alpine water bodies are above treeline or near treeline on at least one approach. There is no terrain shelter from lightning at these elevations while on open water.
  • Forecast accuracy degrades for convective events. Afternoon convective thunderstorms are notoriously difficult to forecast with precision. A morning "30% chance of afternoon storms" may become a 100% near-certain strike event by early afternoon. Treat any chance-of-storm forecast as a mandatory early-return trigger.
  • Plan your exit before you launch. Know where the nearest vehicle access, shelter structure, or substantial building is. Pre-plan a 20-minute exit time from your maximum distance point — storms in Colorado can close from horizon to overhead in under 15 minutes.

💨Wind & Microclimate Data Limitations

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Wind data is from the nearest weather station — not from the lake surface

PeakScout displays wind speed and direction sourced from NOAA weather stations, ASOS automated sensors, and Open-Meteo model outputs. None of these sources measure wind at the specific water surface of any Colorado lake or reservoir. Microclimate effects on large, high-altitude, or topographically enclosed reservoirs can produce conditions significantly different from any nearby station reading.

  • Reservoir funneling effect. Reservoirs aligned with prevailing wind channels — including Blue Mesa, Horsetooth, and Chatfield — can funnel and accelerate wind dramatically beyond surrounding terrain readings. A 10 mph station reading may correspond to 25+ mph sustained gusts on the water surface.
  • Cold air drainage. Overnight cold air drains into alpine basins containing lakes (e.g., Granby, Shadow Mountain, Turquoise Lake). Calm nighttime conditions in surrounding terrain can produce sudden surface wind bursts on the water at dawn as thermal inversions break.
  • Wave height is not modeled. PeakScout does not display lake wave height estimates. Fetch distance, wind duration, and reservoir shape determine wave state — a 15 mph wind on a 10-mile fetch can produce 2+ foot breaking waves capable of swamping open canoes and kayaks.
  • No NOAA marine forecasts exist for Colorado waters. Unlike coastal and Great Lakes waters, Colorado reservoirs have no NOAA marine forecast product. Conditions must be inferred from general land-surface forecasts and on-the-water observation. Do not infer marine-grade forecast accuracy from PeakScout wind data.

🌡Water Temperature & Hypothermia Risk

🥶
Alpine lake water temperature is cold enough to cause hypothermia in minutes, including in summer

Colorado alpine lakes (above 9,000 ft) maintain water temperatures between 40–60°F throughout the summer season. Cold shock from immersion at these temperatures can incapacitate a swimmer within 1–3 minutes. Loss of swimming ability occurs at 50–60°F water within 30 minutes even for strong swimmers. A PFD does not prevent hypothermia — it only keeps you afloat while incapacitated.

  • Water temperature data is estimated, not measured. PeakScout does not measure real-time lake surface temperature at any specific Colorado water body. Temperature estimates displayed (where available) are derived from air temperature models, historical seasonal patterns, and elevation-based heuristics. Actual surface temperatures may be 5–15°F colder or warmer than estimates, particularly early in the season when cold snowmelt dominates the temperature profile.
  • Thermoclines create surface-vs-depth variation. Reservoir surface temperatures in summer can be 10–15°F warmer than water at 5–10 feet depth. A capsized paddler sinks below the warm surface layer immediately, encountering significantly colder water than any surface estimate indicates.
  • Snowmelt inputs lower temperature rapidly. High-runoff periods (typically May–June) can lower reservoir surface temperatures by 5–10°F within days as cold snowmelt enters the water body. Seasonal average estimates do not capture short-term snowmelt events.
  • Wear appropriate immersion protection. Colorado cold-water paddling conditions warrant a wetsuit or drysuit for all trips where air + water temperature combined is below 120°F. PeakScout does not provide immersion protection recommendations for specific trips — that decision is yours based on actual conditions at launch.
  • Drowning risk is explicit and acknowledged. Falling from a watercraft in cold Colorado water, absent appropriate PFD and immersion protection, presents a substantial and immediate drowning risk. PeakScout data does not reduce this risk. You acknowledge this risk by using PeakScout for paddling planning.

🛳Reservoir Levels & Boat Ramp Access

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Reservoir levels change daily — verify boat ramp access with the managing agency before launching

Colorado reservoir storage levels fluctuate significantly due to irrigation drawdown, snowmelt inflow, drought conditions, and operational management by water utilities and the Bureau of Reclamation. Boat ramps that are accessible at normal storage may be dry, stranded, or too shallow to use at reduced storage levels. PeakScout displays BOR reservoir storage data but cannot guarantee that this data reflects ramp conditions at your planned launch point.

  • BOR storage data is updated daily, not real-time. Storage percentages displayed by PeakScout are sourced from the Bureau of Reclamation RISE API and are updated on a daily or sub-daily cycle. Rapid inflow or drawdown events can change ramp access status faster than this data source reflects.
  • Individual ramp status requires local verification. Multi-ramp reservoirs (Horsetooth, Dillon, Chatfield, Cherry Creek) have ramps at different elevations with different minimum-storage requirements. The managing agency (CPW, BOR, Army Corps) posts current ramp status at the facility entrance — this information is not available via any API PeakScout uses.
  • Drought-year drawdown is extreme. During Colorado drought years, reservoirs like Blue Mesa and Navajo have dropped to 30–40% of capacity. At these levels, boat ramps, shore launches, and many designated use areas are completely inaccessible. Historic storage does not predict current conditions.
  • Low-water obstructions are uncharted. At reduced reservoir levels, previously submerged stumps, rocks, bridge piers, and irrigation infrastructure may be at or just below the surface. PeakScout does not display obstruction data for any Colorado reservoir at any storage level.

🎫CPW Regulations — Your Responsibility

Colorado Parks & Wildlife (CPW) administers boating safety law and access regulations at state park waters. PeakScout may display regulatory information as a user convenience — this information is not a substitute for current official CPW regulations, posted signage, and ranger instructions.

PFD Requirements

  • All vessels must carry one USCG-approved Type I, II, III, or V PFD per person on board. Children under 13 must wear a USCG-approved PFD at all times while on any vessel underway. These are Colorado state law requirements, not recommendations.
  • Inflatable PFDs require CO2 cylinder inspection. Automatically inflating PFDs must be maintained per manufacturer specifications. A deflated or improperly armed inflatable PFD does not satisfy the legal PFD requirement.
  • Stand-up paddleboards (SUPs) are classified as vessels under Colorado law. PFD requirements apply to SUP riders.

Wakeless Zones & Speed Restrictions

  • Many Colorado state park lakes have designated wakeless zones within 150 feet of shore, marked swimming areas, and launch ramps. Violations carry fines and potential vessel impoundment.
  • Wakeless zones are marked by buoys on the water and may not be visible or current in PeakScout's data. Observe posted signage on arrival.
  • Some waters (e.g., St. Mary's Lake, many high-country lakes in wilderness areas) have motor-prohibition designations. Verify motorized access status before launching any powered vessel.

Boating Permits & Registration

  • All motorized watercraft and sailboats over 7 feet must be registered with Colorado Parks & Wildlife.
  • Some federal reservoirs require separate BOR recreation passes in addition to CPW registration. Verify requirements at the specific facility before launching.
  • Aquatic invasive species (AIS) inspections are required at all Colorado state park boat ramps. Vessels that have been on out-of-state water must pass inspection before launching. Failure to comply with AIS inspection is a class 2 misdemeanor in Colorado.

Alcohol & Boating Under the Influence

  • Operating a motorized watercraft with a BAC of 0.08% or higher is a class 1 misdemeanor under the Colorado Boating Safety Act (CRS 33-13-108.1). Non-motorized vessels are subject to DUI laws when operator impairment endangers others.
  • BUI enforcement is active on major Colorado reservoirs during summer recreation season.

🧪Water Quality — No Monitoring by PeakScout

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PeakScout does not monitor or display water quality data for any Colorado lake or reservoir

Harmful algal blooms (HABs), cyanobacteria (blue-green algae), E. coli contamination, and mining-related heavy metal contamination events occur at Colorado waters and are not reflected in PeakScout data. CPW issues swim, fish, and boating advisories when contamination is detected — PeakScout does not aggregate or display these advisories.

  • Check CPW water quality advisories before any water contact. CPW posts active advisories at cpw.state.co.us. Cyanotoxins from HABs can cause skin rashes, vomiting, liver damage, and neurological effects. Dog deaths from HAB ingestion are documented at Colorado lakes every summer season.
  • Abandoned mine drainage affects numerous Colorado waters. Gold King Mine-type AMD events can turn waterways bright orange with sulfuric acid and heavy metal contamination. The San Juan Mountains region, Clear Creek, and other mining districts have documented AMD water quality impairment. PeakScout does not display real-time AMD monitoring data.
  • Post-fire water quality degradation. Wildfire runoff introduces ash, sediment, and chemical compounds into downstream reservoirs for months to years after a fire. Post-fire water quality at reservoirs in burned watersheds may be severely impaired even after visual clarity returns. PeakScout does not correlate fire perimeter data with downstream reservoir quality.

🥾Alpine Lake Access & Trail Conditions

Many of Colorado's highest and most scenic lakes — including Ice Lake, American Lake, Blue Lakes (Mt. Sneffels), and the Maroon Bells-area lakes — require 2–8+ mile round-trip hikes over sometimes technical terrain to reach. PeakScout's lake and paddling data does not account for trail access conditions in the approach to these lakes.

  • Trail conditions apply to lake access. Snowpack, blowdowns, creek crossings, and trail closures affect whether you can reach the launch point. Check PeakScout's trail conditions data for the approach trail separately from the lake-specific data.
  • Packraft and inflatable kayak carries involve serious terrain. Carrying inflatable watercraft to alpine lakes means your gear limits your agility on steep talus, snowfields, and technical approaches. Plan approach difficulty as part of your trip safety assessment.
  • No road access = no rapid rescue. Alpine lake sites that require hiking have helicopter-or-foot-travel-only rescue access. Emergency response times in wilderness permit areas exceed 4 hours routinely. A satellite communicator is required safety equipment for alpine lake paddling trips in Colorado.
  • Wilderness permit areas restrict watercraft. Some wilderness-designated alpine lakes (including Indian Peaks Wilderness and Weminuche Wilderness) may restrict motorized and inflatable watercraft under USFS wilderness regulations. Verify permit and use restrictions with the relevant USFS Ranger District before your trip.

⚠️Inherent Hazards — Colorado Lakes & Paddling

⚡ Lightning Strike

Open water paddlers are among the most exposed lightning targets in Colorado's high-altitude storm environment. No warning system, including PeakScout, can replace continuous sky monitoring and mandatory early exit when storms form.

🥶 Cold Water Immersion

Capsizing in Colorado alpine water triggers cold shock, hyperventilation, and incapacitation regardless of swimming ability. A PFD is mandatory — not optional. Wetsuit or drysuit is strongly recommended below 60°F water temperature.

🌀 Sudden Squalls

Colorado high-country reservoirs can go from calm to 35 mph gusts in under 10 minutes as afternoon convection builds. Wind-against-current conditions create steep, short-period waves that capsize small vessels without warning.

🚤 Boat Traffic

High-use reservoirs (Chatfield, Cherry Creek, Dillon, Blue Mesa) have heavy powerboat and personal watercraft traffic on summer weekends. Non-motorized vessels are required to maintain awareness of powered vessel traffic — PeakScout provides no boat traffic data.

🌿 Submerged Hazards

Fluctuating reservoir levels expose and re-submerge stumps, fences, bridge remnants, and irrigation structures. PeakScout provides no obstruction charts for any Colorado reservoir at any fill level.

🚨 Delayed Rescue

At large Colorado reservoirs and all alpine lake sites, emergency response involves both water and land components. Dispatch-to-contact times of 30–90+ minutes are routine. Self-rescue, proper flotation, and communication devices are your primary safety systems.

🛶Not a Substitute for Paddling Experience or Safety Training

PeakScout is a data aggregation and briefing platform. It is not a paddling instruction service, guide referral service, or substitute for hands-on paddling competency and safety training.

  • Self-rescue skills are required for open-water paddling. Wet re-entry, paddle float self-rescue, and assisted rescue techniques are skills that must be practiced before open-water use. PeakScout condition data does not reduce the need for self-rescue competency.
  • American Canoe Association certification is the standard. ACA-certified instructors provide paddling skills assessment, rescue training, and trip planning guidance that no data platform can replicate. For instruction referrals, see americancanoe.org.
  • Float plans with emergency contacts are essential. Leave a detailed float plan (launch point, destination, expected return, vessel description) with someone who will call for help if you don't check in. PeakScout's Trip Safety feature can assist with this — but does not substitute for human emergency contact notification.
  • Vessel appropriateness for conditions is your judgment call. PeakScout cannot assess whether your specific vessel type (inflatable kayak, canoe, stand-up paddleboard, touring kayak, motorized vessel) is appropriate for current or forecast conditions on a specific Colorado water body. That judgment requires on-the-water experience and risk assessment that no platform provides.

⚖️Limitation of Liability

🚨
Limitation of Liability (Colorado Lakes & Paddling Addendum)

TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED BY COLORADO LAW, INCLUDING THE COLORADO RECREATIONAL USE STATUTE (CRS § 33-41-101 ET SEQ.) AND THE COLORADO BOATING SAFETY ACT (CRS § 33-13-101 ET SEQ.), PEAKSCOUT SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY INJURY, DEATH, DROWNING, OR PROPERTY DAMAGE ARISING FROM: (1) RELIANCE ON WEATHER FORECASTS, WIND DATA, OR LIGHTNING RISK INFORMATION; (2) WATER TEMPERATURE ESTIMATES; (3) RESERVOIR LEVEL OR BOAT RAMP ACCESS DATA; (4) CPW REGULATORY INFORMATION DISPLAYED ON PEAKSCOUT; (5) FAILURE TO DETECT OR WARN OF ANY WATER QUALITY CONDITION, INCLUDING HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS; (6) ANY FEATURE OF PEAKSCOUT USED IN CONNECTION WITH COLORADO LAKE OR PADDLING PLANNING OR TRAVEL; OR (7) FAILURE TO OBTAIN ADEQUATE PADDLING INSTRUCTION, EQUIPMENT, OR SAFETY TRAINING. THIS LIMITATION SUPPLEMENTS THE FEDERAL LAND LIABILITY DISCLAIMER — BOTH APPLY TO COLORADO LAKES AND PADDLING USE.

✍️ Acknowledgment & Typed Signature Required

To confirm you have read and understood this disclaimer, type your full legal name below as your digital signature. This constitutes a legally binding acknowledgment under Colorado and federal law.

By signing, I acknowledge
  • Colorado afternoon thunderstorms develop rapidly — PeakScout forecasts are NOT real-time lightning detection
  • Wind data is from the nearest weather station, not lake-specific; microclimate effects on large reservoirs can be severe
  • Water temperatures are estimates, not measured — hypothermia risk exists in alpine lakes even in summer
  • Reservoir levels affect boat ramp access — verify with the managing agency before launching
  • CPW regulations (PFD requirements, wakeless zones, permits) are informational — I am responsible for compliance
  • Drowning is a risk I explicitly acknowledge and accept
  • PeakScout does not monitor water quality (algae blooms, E. coli) — I will check CPW advisories independently
  • Alpine lake access may require hiking through unstable terrain — trail conditions apply
  • PeakScout is not a substitute for paddling experience, safety training, or proper gear
  • I have read Colorado's Boating Safety Act (CRS 33-13-101+) and Recreational Use Statute (CRS 33-41-101+)