Fly Fishing Daily

2026 Fly Fishing Calendar: World Championships, Expos, and Film Tours Heat Up the Season

2 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio 2026 Fly Fishing Calendar: World Championships, Expos, and Film Tours Heat Up the Season

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If you’re a fly fisher keeping one eye on the water and the other on the headlines, there’s plenty going on right now that’s worth a cast. The biggest buzz is the lead up to the 2026 Fly Fishing World Championships in Idaho Falls, where Rob Heal says the rivers and lakes are already drawing attention as the event gets closer. That means more eyes on western water, more local energy, and probably a few anglers daydreaming about what the conditions will look like when the world’s best show up. Out east, the 30th Annual East Idaho Fly Tying and Fly Fishing Expo is set for the Mountain America Center in Idaho Falls on March 20 and 21, 2026, and the best part for a lot of folks is that admission is free. That kind of gathering usually brings the good stuff: new patterns, a little gear talk, and the sort of bench racing that only happens when fly people get together and start comparing notes. If you like your fly fishing with a film festival vibe, the 2026 Fly Fishing Film Tour is already rolling through North America, with stops like Williamstown, Winter Park, and Rangeley on the schedule. It’s the kind of event that tends to fire people up for the season, because one good film can send an angler straight from the theater to the tying bench or the fly shop. And if you want a little more local flavor, MidCurrent and Flylords have both been pushing steady fly fishing news, which matters because this sport lives on what is happening right now: river access, hatch updates, conservation fights, and the next little gear trick somebody swears by. For anglers, that’s the real heartbeat of the scene, not just the trophy shots. So there you have it: world championship pressure, a big Idaho expo, a film tour feeding the obsession, and the news cycle still humming with the stuff fly folks actually care about. Thanks for tuning in, and come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for me check out Quiet Please Dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

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episode 2026 Fly Fishing Calendar: World Championships, Expos, and Film Tours Heat Up the Season artwork

2026 Fly Fishing Calendar: World Championships, Expos, and Film Tours Heat Up the Season

If you’re a fly fisher keeping one eye on the water and the other on the headlines, there’s plenty going on right now that’s worth a cast. The biggest buzz is the lead up to the 2026 Fly Fishing World Championships in Idaho Falls, where Rob Heal says the rivers and lakes are already drawing attention as the event gets closer. That means more eyes on western water, more local energy, and probably a few anglers daydreaming about what the conditions will look like when the world’s best show up. Out east, the 30th Annual East Idaho Fly Tying and Fly Fishing Expo is set for the Mountain America Center in Idaho Falls on March 20 and 21, 2026, and the best part for a lot of folks is that admission is free. That kind of gathering usually brings the good stuff: new patterns, a little gear talk, and the sort of bench racing that only happens when fly people get together and start comparing notes. If you like your fly fishing with a film festival vibe, the 2026 Fly Fishing Film Tour is already rolling through North America, with stops like Williamstown, Winter Park, and Rangeley on the schedule. It’s the kind of event that tends to fire people up for the season, because one good film can send an angler straight from the theater to the tying bench or the fly shop. And if you want a little more local flavor, MidCurrent and Flylords have both been pushing steady fly fishing news, which matters because this sport lives on what is happening right now: river access, hatch updates, conservation fights, and the next little gear trick somebody swears by. For anglers, that’s the real heartbeat of the scene, not just the trophy shots. So there you have it: world championship pressure, a big Idaho expo, a film tour feeding the obsession, and the news cycle still humming with the stuff fly folks actually care about. Thanks for tuning in, and come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for me check out Quiet Please Dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

Ayer2 min
episode Idaho Falls Becomes Fly Fishing Hub: World Championships, Tying Expo, and Conservation Battles in 2025-2026 artwork

Idaho Falls Becomes Fly Fishing Hub: World Championships, Tying Expo, and Conservation Battles in 2025-2026

If you’ve been at the vise wondering what’s happening beyond your home water, there’s actually some pretty cool fly fishing stuff in the news right now. First up, Idaho Falls is about to be way more than a gas stop on the way to the Henry’s Fork. The 2026 Fly Fishing World Championships are headed there, with visiting teams already scouting the Snake, the South Fork, and nearby stillwaters, as shown in a recent feature on YouTube about the event. Picture a bunch of Euro-nymphing wizards in national jerseys high-sticking the same runs you and your buddies usually have to yourselves on a random Tuesday. Local guides are quietly stoked: it’s a chance to put Eastern Idaho’s rivers on the global map without turning it into a theme park. And if you’ve ever thought your drift was pretty dialed, watching the world’s best tightliners pick apart boney pocket water might be a humbling little reality check. Just down the road on the calendar, Idaho Falls is also turning into a kind of fly tying capital. The Mountain America Center is hosting the East Idaho Fly Tying & Fly Fishing Expo again, with the 29th annual show set for February 14–15, 2025, and the 30th already scheduled for March 20–21, 2026, according to the Mountain America Center’s event listing. Free admission, rows of tyers, and more hackle and dubbing than your wallet is ready for. It’s the kind of event where some old timer at a corner table quietly shows you a scruffy, unweighted soft hackle that will outfish your entire box, and then refuses to call it anything but “the brown one.” If you’re more of a wanderer, the big traveling circus is still rolling. The Fly Fishing Show is lining up its 2025 stops coast to coast, with places like Edison, New Jersey (January 24–26, 2025) and Lancaster, Pennsylvania (March 15–16, 2025) already locked in, according to a recent schedule shared by Pennsylvania Fly Fishing. It’s the usual scene: shoulder-to-shoulder at the rod racks, somebody false casting in a casting pond that’s about the size of your living room, and a few low-key legends doing demos to a crowd of ten people who don’t quite realize who they’re watching. You can sit in on a nymphing talk, then immediately ignore half the advice because you’re already planning to go one X lighter than anyone recommended. On the conservation and policy front, Hatch Magazine has been covering a brewing fight over whether to rebuild the old Teton Dam in Idaho. Their recent report on the 50th anniversary of the original dam failure lays out how critics argue that a new structure would hammer native trout habitat and still not make economic sense. For folks who care more about cold, bug-rich tailwater than another bathtub of flat water, this is one worth paying attention to. You don’t have to be a policy wonk to know that once a river becomes a reservoir, you’re not getting those riffles back. So yeah, while you’ve been trying to remember where you left that one box of CDC emergers, the fly fishing world has been quietly lining up world championships, tying expos, traveling shows, and big fights over the future of some pretty important trout water. 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

11 de jun de 20263 min
episode Fly Fishing Shows 2026: Big Events, Competitions, and Conservation News You Missed artwork

Fly Fishing Shows 2026: Big Events, Competitions, and Conservation News You Missed

If you’ve been out on the water more than you’ve been online lately, here’s what’s been happening in the fly fishing world around the U.S., in plain river-talk. First up, the big circus is coming back to town. The Fly Fishing Show announced its 2026 run with stops in Edison, Denver, and the Seattle/Bellevue area, and it’s shaping up like the Super Bowl for gear junkies. According to African Waters, the Edison show hits in late January at the New Jersey Convention & Exposition Center, with Denver and Bellevue following in February. Think wall‑to‑wall fly tiers, new rods you absolutely don’t need but will somehow justify, destination talks that have you checking vacation days on your phone, and enough tying materials to fill a drift boat. If you’ve been fishing the same 5-weight for a decade and swearing you’re “totally fine,” this tour is where that lie goes to die. Out West, Idaho’s keeping its rep as a hardcore trout hub. The Mountain America Center is hosting the 30th Annual East Idaho Fly Tying & Fly Fishing Expo in Idaho Falls in March 2026. They’ve already lined up tiers, classes, and vendors, and the 2025 expo is free to the public, so locals are expecting another big turnout. It’s one of those events where you can watch a guy whip up a size 22 midge in about 30 seconds, then immediately realize you’ve been overdubbing your own flies with way too much material for years. If you’re anywhere near the Snake or Henry’s Fork, this is basically the winter warm‑up before runoff chaos. Competition junkies have something to watch too. Fly Fishing Team USA continues to run its competition cycles, where anglers grind through multiple events over roughly a year and a half to earn points and try to make the national team. According to Fly Fishing Team USA’s competition page, these cycles decide who represents the U.S. at world-level events. If you’ve ever wondered how good you really are at tight‑lining and reading micro‑currents, these folks will make you feel like you’re just out there “casting vibes.” But it’s also pushing modern techniques into the mainstream—more anglers nymphing Euro‑style, thinking about drift angles, and treating a 12-inch wild fish like a chess match instead of a random miracle. On the conservation front, Hatch Magazine has been tracking some tougher news that matters if you care about where your flies actually land. They’ve reported stories like reservoirs being drained and critical trout water getting hammered, the kind of management decisions that can erase a fishery in a season. It’s the reminder none of us want but all of us need: those perfect drifts and grip‑and‑grin shots depend on boring stuff like water policy meetings and habitat work. The upside is that every time these stories hit the news, more anglers show up, speak up, and donate to the local groups doing the unglamorous work. Alright, that’s the run‑down for this week: big shows loading up the calendar, Idaho keeping the tying flame lit, Team USA sharpening the competitive edge, and conservation still the river’s referee. 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

10 de jun de 20263 min
episode Fly Fishing News 2025: Teton Dam Debate, Idaho Expo, Competitions & Youth Events artwork

Fly Fishing News 2025: Teton Dam Debate, Idaho Expo, Competitions & Youth Events

If you’ve been at the vise or staring at river gauges more than the news lately, here’s what’s been going on in the fly‑fishing world around the U.S. First up, out West, water politics and trout are colliding again. Hatch Magazine reports that talk of rebuilding the old Teton Dam in Idaho has fired back up 50 years after the original disaster. Opponents say a new dam would drown prime native trout habitat on the Teton River, change temperatures, and basically turn a wild fishery into a reservoir sideshow. The debate isn’t just about power and storage; it’s about whether we value that cold, bug‑rich, riffle‑and‑run water more than another big concrete wall. If you’ve ever watched a Teton trout sip a PMD in soft evening light, you know exactly which side most local fly anglers are on. Swing a little east to Idaho Falls and you’ve got a very different story: community instead of controversy. The Mountain America Center has announced that the 29th Annual East Idaho Fly Tying & Fly Fishing Expo is set for mid‑February 2025, with the 30th already on the books for March 2026. According to the event listing, admission’s free, doors open early, and it’s the usual circus of demo tiers, casting instruction, and gear peddlers. For a lot of Western anglers, that expo is where winter officially cracks—where you swap half‑baked trip plans, pick up a new pattern from a local legend, and spend more on hackle than you’d ever admit to your spouse. Competition wise, things are heating up too. Fly Fishing Team USA already has a full slate of 2025 events lined up, from the Gatlinburg Delayed Harvest comp to the SE and NE Interregionals and the Gold Cup Championships. The schedule on Fly Fishing Team USA’s site reads like a touring rock band—different rivers, different regions, same crew of anglers turning technical water into chess boards. If you’ve ever wondered how good the very best euro‑nymphers and dry‑fly snipers really are, those events are where you find out. And if you’re one of the folks who grumble that “real fishing isn’t a contest,” you might still steal a rigging trick or two just watching from the bank. On the youth side, USAngling has youth fly‑fishing clinics and a 2025 Youth World Championship on the calendar. Their youth page lays out a whole pipeline of events aimed at teaching kids competition skills, but it’s bigger than just medals. It’s about putting a fly rod in young hands, teaching river etiquette, reading water, and maybe sneaking in a conservation lesson between drifts. If you care about who’s going to fight for your home river 20 years from now, those kids in oversized waders are the ones. Then, when the weather’s hot and the bugs get small, the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service is stepping in with summer fishing events around the country. Their events page highlights family‑friendly days at places like Wolf Creek National Fish Hatchery, with fly tying, basic casting, and general “let’s get people on the water” energy. It’s not a secret that license sales and participation keep our fisheries budgets afloat; every kid who catches a bluegill on a fly at one of those events might be the person paying for your favorite access site down the road. That’s the quick lap around what’s happening in the fly‑fishing world right now: dams and native trout on the line, expos filling winter with feather dust, elite anglers turning rivers into scorecards, and kids learning that a good drift beats a video game any day. 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

9 de jun de 20263 min
episode 2026 Fly Fishing Shows, Film Tours, and Conservation Debates Heat Up the Angling Season artwork

2026 Fly Fishing Shows, Film Tours, and Conservation Debates Heat Up the Angling Season

Fly fishing has been having a pretty lively run in the U.S. news, and a few stories are worth keeping an eye on if you like water, bugs, and a good excuse to skip the crowd. The biggest buzz right now is around the 2026 Fly Fishing Show, which is rolling through places like Edison, Denver, and Seattle area stops, giving anglers a place to chase new gear, talk tactics, and swap lies about the one that got away, according to The Fly Fishing Show and African Waters.[10][2] Another story with real local heat is the Fly Fishing Film Tour, which is still making the rounds in towns across the country this June, including spots like Williamstown, Winter Park, and Rangeley, according to the official tour schedule. That matters because these screenings are where a lot of fly anglers pick up new river ideas, new destinations, and a fresh itch to road trip.[6] Out in Idaho, the East Idaho Fly Tying and Fly Fishing Expo is back on the calendar in Idaho Falls, and Mountain America Center says the 30th annual show is set for March 20 and 21, 2026. For anybody who likes tying bugs, talking shop, or handling rods before buying, that kind of regional expo is still a big deal.[4] And there is also some legit conservation talk floating around the fly fishing world. Hatch Magazine reports that people are debating whether the old Teton Dam could ever be rebuilt, with critics warning that a new dam could hurt native trout and not pencil out economically. For fly anglers, that is not just politics, it is river water, fish habitat, and the future of a place people care about.[5] So that is the scene: shows, films, tying expos, and conservation fights, all of it keeping fly fishing in the public eye and giving anglers plenty to chew on between casts. Thanks for tuning in, and come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for me check out Quiet Please Dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

8 de jun de 20262 min