Fly Fishing Daily
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
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