Fly Fishing Daily
If you’ve been stuck at the vise wondering what’s actually happening in the fly world beyond your home water, there’s been some pretty interesting stuff in the news lately. First up, Colorado’s been playing musical chairs with trout. According to MidCurrent’s news page, Colorado Parks and Wildlife just moved more than a thousand trout out of Antero Reservoir as Denver Water dropped levels there for a big drawdown, trucking those fish over to Eleven Mile Reservoir and the South Fork of the South Platte. That’s the kind of behind-the-scenes work that keeps our “mystery 18-inchers” showing up in tailwaters after a big water project. If you fish that South Platte system, you might be casting to some of those relocated refugees without even knowing it. Out in Idaho, the East Idaho Fly Tying & Fly Fishing Expo is gearing up again in Idaho Falls. The Mountain America Center site says the 29th annual expo is set for mid-February 2025, with the 30th already booked for March 2026. That show is one of those “you either know or you don’t” regional gatherings—wall-to-wall vises, cheap patterns at the swap tables, and some gray-bearded local who’s been quietly cracking the Henry’s Fork puzzle for 40 years. If you’re the sort who’d rather talk thread tension and CDC vs. snowshoe rabbit than sit through another Zoom meeting, that’s your scene. On the competitive side, the youth are coming in hot. USAngling reports that registration is open for the 2026 USA Fly Fishing Youth Team National Championship at Lake George, Colorado. That’s basically the farm system for the kids who end up fishing worlds and making the rest of us feel clumsy with a 10-foot 3-weight. The same page lists youth clinics in 2024 and 2025, so if you’ve got a kid who’d rather high-stick than scroll TikTok, there’s a legit pipeline now—structured comps, coaching, and real water time instead of just YouTube. If you like the bigger industry picture, places like Flylords Mag and The Drake’s news section have been tracking a mix of conservation stories and gear chatter. Recent pieces have touched on new gear drops, river access battles, and some of the usual “are we loving our fisheries to death” questions. None of that’s as flashy as a new reel, but that’s where you find out if the river you road-trip to every June is about to get hammered by drought, development, or some genius plan to straighten a meandering trout stream into a drainage ditch. So yeah, while you’re swapping out tippet rings and wondering if you really need another box of emergers, there’s a lot happening—fish getting shuffled to new homes in Colorado, show floors filling up in Idaho Falls, youth anglers training like athletes, and writers quietly keeping tabs on the waters we all share. Thanks for tuning in, and come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for more from me check out QuietPlease dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
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