By Jacob Factor | Fox 31 News
DENVER (KDVR) — At least one of Colorado’s gray wolves in March entered a new Denver area county and new watersheds in northern Park County, some of the closest areas to the Denver metro they have been tracked since their initial reintroduction.
Colorado Parks and Wildlife on Wednesday released a new map for collared wolf activity between Feb. 25 and March 25, showing wolf activity in Clear Creek County and in watersheds that extend into northern Park County toward the Jefferson County border.USDA confirms wolf relocated to Colorado killed by Wildlife Services in Wyoming
CPW tracks the wolves based on watersheds they enter at some point in the month-long span, but they do not report exact locations within those watersheds.
This map shows collared gray wolf activity recorded by CPW from Feb. 25, 2025, to March 25, 2025. (Courtesy Colorado Parks and Wildlife)
This map shows collared gray wolf activity recorded by CPW from Feb. 25, 2025, to March 25, 2025. (Courtesy Colorado Parks and Wildlife)
The Park County watersheds that wolves have now entered include U.S. 285 and Bailey, and the Clear Creek County watersheds include Interstate 70 on the western side of the county, as well as Berthoud Pass and Empire. That does not necessarily mean the wolves were in any of these towns or areas specifically.