Hey folks, grab your rods and listen up—it's your local fly fishing roundup with the latest buzz from the rivers. First off, down in Colorado, that Lower Blue River's got drama brewin'. Colorado Parks and Wildlife's Jon Ewert dropped a report flaggin' pellet-feeding programs as the big bad causin' overcrowdin', gill lice, and fish die-offs. Landowners are pushin' a 10-year pilot permit for floaters to thin the crowds and save the trout—catch-and-release only, but angler pressure's still a factor, even if minor.
Head over to Wyoming, where Game and Fish rolled out 2026 regs that hit home. North Platte's hot spots like Miracle Mile, Gray Reef, and Fremont Canyon's now single-point barbless hooks only, no more pegged attractors, and fly/lure rules stretched to Government Bridge. Plus, a spawn closure at Gray Reef from April 1 to May 15 to protect those rainbows. Snake River below Jackson Lake? Trout limit doubled to six—no length caps. Guides, don't forget that $325 boat reg sticker.
Montana's closin' Red Rock Creek in the Centennial Valley come Jan 1—yep, the whole stretch from Elk Lake Road to upper Red Rock Lake. Home to big native cutthroats and rare grayling, but Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks says it's off-limits to let 'em thrive.
And if you're itchin' for gear and tips, mark your calendars for The Fly Fishing Show 2026—kicks off Jan 16-18 in Marlborough, Mass., hittin' Edison NJ, Denver, Seattle, and Pleasanton CA before wrappin' March 14-15 in Lancaster, PA. Seminars, rods, flies, the works.
Man, these changes mean we gotta stay sharp out there—barbless hooks'll save fish on release, closures protect the natives, and shows get us geared for spring. Tight lines, locals.
Thanks for tunin' in, come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for me, check out Quiet Please Dot A I.
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