Golfweek’s Best 2022: Top public and private courses in Wyoming

Wyoming’s top golf courses offer the opportunity to elevate your golf game.

If you’re looking to elevate your golf game, Wyoming – with its thin air and mountainous terrain – might be just the spot.

Golfweek’s Best offers many lists of course rankings, with that of top public-access courses in each state among the most popular. All the courses on this list allow public access in some fashion, be it standard daily green fees, through a resort or by staying at an affiliated hotel. If there’s a will, there’s a tee time.

Also popular are the Golfweek’s Best rankings of top private courses in each state, and that list for Wyoming’s private offerings is likewise included below.

(m): Modern course, built in or after 1960
(c): Classic course, built before 1960

Note: If there is a number in the parenthesis with the m or c, that indicates where that course ranks among Golfweek’s Best top 200 modern or classic courses. 

* New to or returning to list

Record sturgeon catch described as ‘exceedingly rare’

A Idaho lake known for bass and crappie fishing is now famous for having produced the state-record white sturgeon.

A Idaho lake known for bass and crappie fishing is now famous for having produced the state-record white sturgeon.

Greg Poulsen, visiting from Utah, landed the nearly 10-foot, 4-inch sturgeon Aug. 5 after a marathon battle at C.J. Strike Reservoir.

White sturgeon, the largest freshwater fish in North America, are protected in Idaho and the state only recognizes catch-and-release records.

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The sturgeon released by Poulsen measured 124 inches (10.33 feet). The previous record was 119.5 inches, set in 2019.

The Idaho Department of Fish and Game, which announced the record on Friday, explained that white sturgeon exceeding 10 feet are “exceedingly rare” anywhere but the deep-running Hells Canyon stretch of the Snake River.

Even in Hells Canyon, though, of the more than 4,000 white sturgeon counted during IDFG surveys over the past 30 years, only 10 sturgeon exceeded 10 feet.

“So, yes, they do exist, but these are very rare and special fish,” the IDFG stated Friday.

Sturgeon populations in Idaho have declined sharply from historic levels because of dams, pollution and over harvesting.

The release-only rule has been in place since 1971. But Idaho does list a rod-and-reel weight record for white sturgeon: a 394-pound fish caught on the Snake River by Glenn Howard in 1956.

The state also has record of a 675-pound white sturgeon caught via set line in 1908.

C.J. Strike Reservoir is an impoundment of the Snake River and Bruneau River.

Poulsen and his wife, Angie, and friend Wendy Guess – all from Eagle Mountain, Utah – are pictured posing with the record sturgeon in the water. Hoisting sturgeon even for photos is banned.

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Boy’s latest fish of a lifetime is ‘an absolute giant’

Avid fisherman Tyler Grimshaw, 12, is in the news again, this time with a white sturgeon catch on the Snake River. It’s his third “fish of a lifetime.”

Avid fisherman Tyler Grimshaw, age 12, is in the news yet again, this time with his third fish of a lifetime, one he described as “an absolute giant.”

Tyler, fishing the Snake River with his father Lance Grimshaw and local guide Joe Weisner, landed a 9-foot, 11-inch sturgeon, and missed tying the Idaho record for a caught-and-released white sturgeon by a half inch.

The current record is 119½ inches caught by seven anglers on July 9, 2019, also on the Snake River, according to the Idaho Department of Fish and Game. Tyler’s catch in inches was 119, but he did it with no outside help, which ordinarily would make him the record-holder.

“Tyler sat on that rod and pumped that fish for 50 minutes,” Weisner told Outdoor Life. “He wasn’t about to hand that rod over to nobody. The fish jumped a total of four times. It jumped once right next to the boat—maybe 2 feet away. It was terrifying.”

“A fish of this caliber, it doesn’t come around very often,” Weisner told KTVB. “This fish was far bigger than anything I had ever seen before. I was at a loss for words it was so large. It’s one of those moments that was truly incredible.”

It was actually Tyler’s second sturgeon catch of the day; he reeled in a 7-footer in the first 20 minutes on the river. But the best, and biggest, was yet to come.

“They knew from the start of the fight that it was massive,” Vanessa Grimshaw, Tyler’s mother, told USA Today/For The Win Outdoors.

Also on FTW Outdoors: Former NHL star catches huge sturgeon claimed to be a world record

Weisner told KTVB the obvious, that Tyler hooked into a fish of a lifetime. And indeed he did. Again.

“No one has realized he is the same kid that made headlines two previous times with his 41- and 48-pound lake trout. He has gotten a ‘fish of a lifetime’ three times now.”

Each year he seems to catch a fish of a lifetime.

At age 10, Tyler landed the 41-pound lake trout from Flaming Gorge.

At age 11, Tyler landed the 48-pound lake trout from Flaming Gorge, and that was a near-record catch.

“[He had] maybe a drop of disappointment that he didn’t beat the record [with his sturgeon],” Vanessa told For The Win Outdoors. “He isn’t giving up. He says the record will be his eventually.”

Could that be what he does for an encore at age 13? Stay tuned.

Photos courtesy of Joe Weisner of Jones Sport Fishing.

Hunters get into hot water over legal elk hunt that was a fiasco

Hunters in Wyoming did nothing against the law, but their ethics were called into question over an elk hunt that turned into a ‘nightmare.’

Out-of-state hunters in Wyoming did nothing against the law, but their ethics were called into question over an elk hunt in Jackson Hole that turned into a fiasco. Knowing what they know now, they’d never have done what they did in the first place.

Bob Geringer, 79, of Minnesota was hunting on Sept. 26 with two friends in an area unfamiliar to them along the Snake River when they spotted elk on a mid-river island, as reported by the Jackson Hole News and Guide.

The hunters, properly licensed as non-residents, legally shot three cow elk and a calf around 9 a.m. on the island, which is about 1½ miles north of Emily’s Pond.

“It turned out to be a…nightmare,” Geringer told Jackson Hole News and Guide. “We didn’t realize the river was quite the way it was, and it happened fast.”

What they didn’t realize was that the river was running faster than they thought and that it was located in an area used by dog walkers, joggers, and families and friends as a place to stroll near the river.

The hunters hadn’t thought about how they’d retrieve the carcasses and realized they’d be risking their lives if they tried to ford the river.

Meanwhile, people started showing up on the scene with one getting into a heated confrontation and others calling the Wyoming Game and Fish Department to report what they thought was suspicion illegal activity.

Jackson Hole resident Brad Nielson came upon the scene around 3 p.m. and was incensed. He told the hunters shooting the elk on the island was not fair to the animals.

“It’s an ethical question,” Nielson, a hunter, told News and Guide. “That’s not fair chase, cornering them on an island and mowing them down.

“I told them they’d set back years of effort to create goodwill between the non-hunting community and hunters.”

Also on FTW Outdoors: Alligator steals little boy’s catch and fishing rod (video)

Game warden Jon Stephens met up with Geringer and the other two hunters Sunday evening to plan how to retrieve the elk.

“I chewed on them a little bit for the eyesore that they created,” Stephens told the News and Guide.

He then got help, procuring a canoe and wheelbarrow to use for extracting the meat. The first attempt resulted in a canoe capsizing and being washed away unmanned downstream.

The Jackson Hole News and Guide explained further:

Stephens could see that the makeshift meat recovery plan was futile, and he instructed the hunters to gut out the animals and then to get back across the river before nightfall. On Monday afternoon the Minnesotans returned, this time with the assistance of a local resident they commissioned to float out their elk meat with a raft. That operation went smoothly, the warden reported, and by 6 p.m. — some 33 hours after their gunfire — the Minnesotans’ meat was being rafted downstream toward the Wilson boat ramp.

Jane Frisch, who walks the levee nearly every day, voiced concern about mixing hunting with other uses in that area of the Snake River.

“There were young families playing in the river that day,” she told News and Guide. “On a Sunday afternoon there’s a lot of people out there, and a lot of people of all ages.” She added that the visual was “really upsetting” to a lot of people who passed by.

It would be surprising if Game and Fish didn’t readdress regulations for that area.

Also on FTW Outdoors: Poacher fishing from rowboat caught in the act by undercover officer

“If it’s a walking trail, why is it open for public hunting?” an apologetic Geringer told News and Guide.

Not everybody that happend upon the scene was displeased, however.

“You can’t imagine how many people congratulated us and were happy for us,” Geringer told News and Guide. “It’s just that the timing was wrong. If we had to do it again, there’s no way in the world any of us would have done that. It just happened.”

Wyoming Game and Fish Department Director Brian Nesvik wouldn’t comment on the incident without hearing the details but agree with his warden that just because something is legal doesn’t mean it’s the right thing to do.

“Hunter ethics are very important,” Nesvik told News and Guide. “We do have laws that are based on ethics and fair chase, but you can’t regulate all of it. You’ve got to hope that hunters will do the right thing and be respectful of both the wildlife they’re hunting as well as the rest of the public.”

Photos courtesy of Wyoming Game and Fish Department and Wikipedia Commons.

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Angler shatters carp record while fishing for bass

An Idaho angler went bass fishing Sunday, but ended up landing a record-shattering common carp.

An Idaho angler went fishing for bass Sunday, but ended up landing a record-shattering common carp.

Hanson resident Alex Veenstra caught the 30-pound, 4-ounce “mirror” carp while casting a crankbait on the Snake River above Upper Salmon Dam.

“Went bass fishing but ending up catching this guy,” Veenstra wrote on Instagram.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CJELe-ShzHE/

The Idaho Department of Fish and Game announced the record in a news release issued Wednesday, stating that Veenstra’s catch broke the previous record by 10 pounds.

Mirror carp are a variant of common carp, the IDFG explained, known for their mirror-shaped scales. They’re more common – and more prized – in parts of Europe.

Common carp are fairly widespread globally and can grow to 60-plus pounds under suitable conditions.

The all-tackle world record common carp, according to the International Game Fish Assn., stands at 75 pounds, 11 ounces. That fish was caught in 1987 at Lac de St. Cassien, France.

The IGFA does not keep records specific to mirror carp.

–Images showing Alex Veenstra with his record carp are courtesy of the Idaho Department of Fish and Game