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.
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