Fly Fishing Daily
If you’ve been sneaking glances at the news between tying up PMDs and checking flows, you know fly fishing’s been popping up in some pretty real stories lately. First one’s big-picture, but it hits home for anyone who cares about trout water. MidCurrent reports that a move to roll back the Roadless Rule has cleared a key Senate committee, putting protections on roughly 45 million acres of national forest “trout country” at risk. That’s the kind of country that holds those cold, clean headwaters we all run to when the tailwaters hit bathwater temps. The concern is simple: more roads, more logging and development, more sediment and warmer water. If you like sneaking up a shaded creek with a 3‑weight and a handful of caddis, this isn’t just politics, it’s your future summer plan on the line. Staying on the climate thread, Rise Beyond Fly Fishing has been digging into how climate change is already reshaping where and when we fish. They point out that rivers and lakes are literally heating up, oxygen drops, and trout slide higher in elevation or farther north chasing survivable temps. Guides are running more dawn patrol trips, and more shops are preaching those “fish before 10 a.m., hang it up at 68 degrees” ethics. It’s not hypothetical anymore; it’s why your home river now has those random mid‑August closures and why you’re suddenly googling “high-country brook trout hike-in” a lot more than you used to. On the conservation and water‑wars front, Hatch Magazine has been following a push to potentially rebuild the Teton Dam in Idaho, 50 years after the original dam failed catastrophically. Opponents argue that a new dam would trash native trout habitat on the Teton River and still not pencil out economically. The Teton’s become a legit wild trout fishery, the kind of place where you row past cottonwoods, throw hoppers at undercut banks, and know every bend has history. Rebuilding that dam would flood a lot of what makes that river special. It’s one of those classic Western fights: storage and development versus keeping a river a river. And while all that’s swirling, there’s some good community energy too. The American Fly Fishing Trade Association has been talking about “strengthening the fly fishing community” as we roll into 2025, highlighting how shops, guides, and brands are leaning harder into conservation, inclusion, and education. At the same time, the Flylab Substack has been calling 2026 a year of “elevated fishing conscience,” with more anglers paying attention to fish handling, flow levels, and the bigger picture. Translation for regular folks: more people who don’t just want grip‑and‑grins, they want their grandkids to be able to fish the same runs. So yeah, from threatened headwaters to heated rivers, from potential new dams to a community trying to grow up a bit, fly fishing’s all over the news right now—and not just in the gear catalogs. Thanks for tuning in, and come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and if you want more from me, check out QuietPlease dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
578 episoder
Kommentarer
0Vær den første til at kommentere
Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af Fly Fishing Daily-fællesskabet!