Fly Fishing Daily

Fly Fishing Under Pressure: Roadless Rule Rollback, Climate Change, and the Fight to Save Trout Country in 2025

3 min · 14 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Fly Fishing Under Pressure: Roadless Rule Rollback, Climate Change, and the Fight to Save Trout Country in 2025

Descripción

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

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Portada del episodio Fly Fishing 2026: Public Lands Fight, Free Community Programs, and Gear Innovation Reshape the Sport

Fly Fishing 2026: Public Lands Fight, Free Community Programs, and Gear Innovation Reshape the Sport

If you’ve been busy chasing evening risers and haven’t checked the news lately, fly fishing’s been right in the middle of some pretty wild storylines. First up, public lands and coldwater trout are back on the hot seat. MidCurrent reports that a move to unwind protections under the old “Roadless Rule” just cleared a key Senate committee, putting more than 45 million acres of what they straight-up call “trout country” at risk of new roads, logging, and development. That’s not some far‑off abstract thing either – we’re talking headwater creeks, high-country cutthroat, all the little places you and I sneak off to when the crowds are hammering the big rivers. Guides, shop owners, and conservation groups are sounding the alarm because once you punch roads into those basins, the sediment, warm water, and pressure come right behind. MidCurrent has been tracking it closely, and if you like your trout cold and your access free, this is one worth watching. On a more hopeful note, there’s a really cool community wave building. Community Fly Fishing, a nonprofit highlighted on their own site and by a bunch of regional blogs, is running free, community-based fly fishing programs in U.S. towns that don’t usually show up in glossy destination pieces. We’re talking free rods, free instruction, and a very intentional push to open the sport up to folks who never saw themselves in a drift boat ad. They’re holding neighborhood clinics, park pond days, and beginner nights where the only barrier to entry is just showing up. If you’ve ever grumbled that “no one’s teaching kids to do it right anymore,” this is literally that, happening right now. Gearheads are getting some candy too. Hatch Magazine just dropped a rundown of new fly fishing gear for May 2026, and it’s clear the brands know anglers are thinking harder about how and what they fish. There are lighter, more repairable reels, eco-minded wader fabrics, and some sneaky-smart lines aimed at making tight quarters and technical presentations a little less humbling. Hatch points out that a lot of this stuff is built around durability and lower environmental impact, which lines up with what Angling Trade’s Flylab Substack has been calling a 2026 trend toward a more “elevated fishing conscience” – more attention to water temps, handling fish, and not loving a river to death. Speaking of that conscience, Flylab also zeroed in on Colorado’s Lower Blue River as a kind of poster child for what happens when flows, crowds, and expectations all collide at once. They talk about how we’re hitting this moment where anglers are being asked to think beyond “Did I get mine today?” and more about whether the river gets to stay healthy enough that we can all keep coming back. It’s subtle, but you can feel the culture shifting: more voluntary closures, more “fish early, quit when it hits 68,” more people bragging about skipping a day to let a stressed river breathe. Put it all together and you’ve got a sport that’s in the news for all the right and wrong reasons at the same time: big policy fights over the last best trout water, grassroots projects putting free rods in new hands, and a gear and media scene leaning into the idea that being a good angler now means being a better steward too. 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 Quiet Please Dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

Ayer3 min
Portada del episodio 2025 Fly Fishing Calendar: Team USA Comps, Idaho Expo & New Gear Releases

2025 Fly Fishing Calendar: Team USA Comps, Idaho Expo & New Gear Releases

If you’ve been busy watching your indicators instead of the headlines, here’s what’s been happening in the fly fishing world lately. First up, comp nerds, this one’s for you. Fly Fishing Team USA has their 2025 schedule locked in, with regional events in the Southeast, Northeast, Midwest, and West and big comps like the Gold Cup Championships on the calendar. According to Fly Fishing Team USA’s competition page, they’re running one‑day, twelve‑angler regional events designed to pull in strong local sticks and feed talent up the ladder. That means if you’ve ever thought, “I could hang with those guys,” this next year or so is your shot to prove it on real water, under a clock, with no excuses. Out West, the tying vises are about to get a serious workout. The Mountain America Center in Idaho Falls is hosting the 29th Annual East Idaho Fly Tying & Fly Fishing Expo on February 14–15, 2025, with the 30th already slated for March 20–21, 2026, according to the Mountain America Center event listing. This isn’t some tiny church-basement swap. We’re talking rows of tyers at the vise, classes, auctions, and a whole lot of very fishy people arguing about whether an olive or tan body gets more grabs on a cloudy day. Admission for the 2025 show is listed as free to the public, so if you’re anywhere near the Snake or Henry’s Fork, you can roll in, learn a new pattern, then go test it that afternoon. On the gear and industry side, Hatch Magazine’s news section has been dropping regular “new gear” rundowns, including a May 2026 feature highlighting fresh rods, lines, packs, and tools aimed squarely at folks who live with a stripping basket by the front door. New materials and designs are creeping in everywhere—lighter reels, more sustainable wader fabrics, weirdly smart fly lines. It’s that time of year where you tell yourself you’re “just looking,” then somehow you’re standing in a river three weeks later with a new 5‑weight wondering how you ever lived without it. If you’re the show-circuit type, The Fly Fishing Show is already talking up their next rounds, and they’re still running their Consumer Choice Awards in partnership with Fly Fusion Magazine and Fly Fishing Journeys, according to the Fly Fishing Show site. That means more chances for regular anglers—not just shop owners—to vote on what’s actually working out on the water. It’s one of the few places where the stuff we all beat up on rivers and flats actually gets judged by people who fish it hard, not just by catalog photos. And tucked behind all this splashy news, sites like Orvis News, The Drake’s fly fishing news section, and MidCurrent keep quietly cranking out trip reports, conservation updates, and how‑tos. They’re the places you hear about access fights, river closures, new regulations, and the odd hero story about someone restoring a beat‑up stretch of water while the rest of us are arguing about hook sizes at the bar. Alright, that’s enough dock talk for this week. 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 Quiet Please dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

16 de jun de 20263 min
Portada del episodio Fly Fishing in 2026: Conservation, Access, and the Future of Trout Waters Under Scrutiny

Fly Fishing in 2026: Conservation, Access, and the Future of Trout Waters Under Scrutiny

Out on the water, the fly fishing world has a few fresh headlines worth swapping at the tailgate. In Washington, MidCurrent reports that a Senate committee cleared a move to repeal the Roadless Rule, a change that could open the door to development across about 45 million acres of trout country, which has a lot of anglers watching their home waters a little closer.[1] MidCurrent also says a new tool called TroutCast is now forecasting where drought is going to thin out fish populations or even shut waters down, and that is the kind of heads up a serious fly fisher lives for.[1] If you have ever driven two hours for a river only to find it running low and skinny, you know why that matters. Then there is the weather side of the story. Flylab says 2026 is shaping up as a year where anglers are paying more attention to fishing conscience, especially catch and release habits and the health of the fishery.[4] That lines up with what a lot of folks on the river are already feeling, which is that the best day on the water is the one that leaves the place better than you found it. And the culture around the sport is shifting too. Orvis says fly fishing is becoming more inclusive, with more education, more workshops, and more guided trips helping bring in new people while keeping the old hands engaged.[2] That matters because a stronger, broader community usually means more voices showing up when rivers, access, and conservation are on the line. So the big story right now is not just about catching fish. It is about who gets access, how healthy the water stays, and whether the next generation still gets to feel that first solid take on a dry fly. Thanks for tuning in, come back next week for more, and this has been a Quiet Please production. For me, check out Quiet Please Dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

15 de jun de 20262 min
Portada del episodio Fly Fishing Under Pressure: Roadless Rule Rollback, Climate Change, and the Fight to Save Trout Country in 2025

Fly Fishing Under Pressure: Roadless Rule Rollback, Climate Change, and the Fight to Save Trout Country in 2025

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

14 de jun de 20263 min
Portada del episodio Colorado's Antero Reservoir Faces Drain: What Fly Anglers Need to Know About Losing an Iconic Trout Fishery

Colorado's Antero Reservoir Faces Drain: What Fly Anglers Need to Know About Losing an Iconic Trout Fishery

If you’ve been watching the fly-fishing world lately, it’s been one of those “only-in-our-sport” mixes of killer opportunities, gut-punch conservation news, and a few bright spots that make you want to grab a 5‑weight and hit the road. Let’s start with the big gut punch. Hatch Magazine reports that Colorado’s Antero Reservoir is slated to be completely drained, which means its famous brown, brook, cutthroat, and rainbow trout fishery is basically on death row. Antero’s been one of those stillwater spots where you could throw a leech or chironomid and have a legit shot at a fish of a lifetime. Now the water’s going away, and with it a whole class of trout that grew fat on scuds and midges. Local anglers are trying to figure out whether to treat it like a farewell tour or a wake. Either way, if you know Antero, you know this one hurts. Zooming out, MidCurrent’s news feed has been buzzing about a much larger threat: federal moves to weaken protections on roadless areas that cover roughly 45 million acres of prime trout and salmon country. We’re talking headwater creeks and coldwater refuges that are basically the nursery grounds for the fish we chase downstream. Think more roads, more erosion, warmer water, and fewer wild fish. Conservation groups and a lot of guides are lining up on this, because once you cut roads into those last quiet basins, you don’t really get “backcountry” back. If you like sneaking up a no‑name tributary with a three‑weight, this isn’t just policy—it’s personal. There is some seriously good energy in the next generation, though. USAngling’s youth fly-fishing program has opened registration for the 2026 USA Fly Fishing Youth Team National Championship at Lake George, Colorado. It’s a full-on competition scene—tight‑line nymphing, precise dry-fly work, measured beats, the whole deal. For a lot of these kids, this is their entry ticket to the world stage and a lifetime addiction to rivers. If you’ve ever worried that fly fishing is “graying out,” watching a teenager out‑euro‑nymph you on technical water is a pretty good cure. And if you’re more into community than competition, Idaho is about to be the center of the fly-tying universe. The Mountain America Center in Idaho Falls is hosting the East Idaho Fly Tying & Fly Fishing Expo, which is rolling into its 29th and 30th annual events. It’s classic small‑town/big‑heart fly fishing: rows of tiers spinning up bugs you’ve never heard of, casting demos, local conservation booths, the whole tribe under one roof. For a lot of folks, that expo is where they learn the pattern that becomes “their” fly for the next decade. All of this is to say: if you’re a fly angler in the U.S. right now, the news is a mix of “get involved,” “get out there while you can,” and “the kids are gonna be alright.” The fish need us paying attention, but the culture’s still very much alive. 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

13 de jun de 20263 min