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  • Fly Fishing Boom: Young Anglers Surge 42% While River Conservation Debates Heat Up in 2026
    2026/04/16
    Hey folks, grab your rods and listen up, cause the fly fishing world's buzzing with some real gems right now. First off, younger blood's flooding our rivers—American Sportfishing Association says participation's jumped 14% in five years, with twenty and thirty-somethings up 42% since 2020, per the Fly Fishing Insider Podcast. No more graying out; these kids are hitting urban streams near cities, where fish ain't as spooky and YouTube's dishing free tips that used to cost a guided trip fortune.

    Over in Colorado, Colorado Parks and Wildlife's fresh Lower Blue River survey from December 2025 is dropping truth bombs. Biologist Jon Ewert calls out pellet-feeding programs for overcrowding trout, spreading gill lice, and tanking populations—way bigger issue than us wading anglers. Landowners like those at Blue Valley Ranch are pushing a 10-year float permit pilot, but CPW says angler mortality's minor under catch-and-release rules. Makes you think twice before chumming the water, right?

    Montana's got parallel push drama brewing, MidCurrent reports it won't hit legislature till 2027 earliest—some access fight we locals need to watch close. And tying fans, a statewide challenge from MidCurrent wants your boxes stocked for youth programs by April 1; get those vises humming.

    Man, 2026's shaping up with more conscience on the water too, like better catch-and-release and eyeing river temps, says AT News trends.

    Thanks for tuning in, tight lines till next week. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for me check out Quiet Please Dot A I.

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    2 分
  • Fly Fishing Boom 2026: Dam Removals, River Restoration & Gen Z Anglers Transform US Fisheries
    2026/04/15
    Hey folks, gather round the vice, its your boy here with the latest buzz from the fly fishing front lines, straight no chaser. First off, Colorados Lower Blue River is makin headlines with that fresh fishery survey from Colorado Parks and Wildlife. Biologist Jon Ewert dropped the hammer: all them pellet-fed rainbows are overcrowdin the joint, spreadin gill lice like wildfire, and tankin the trout pop. Landowners like Paul Tudor Jones at Blue Valley Ranch are pushin a 10-year floaters permit pilot, blamin drift boats for the mess. CPW says nah, angler kills are minor in this catch-and-release stretch. Food for thought next time youre riggin up the nymphs down there.

    Then theres the Klamath River makin historyThe Fly Shop reports four dams finally ripped out after decades of battles, the biggest removal project in US history. Upper Klamaths runnin free now, openin miles for salmon and steelhead. If youre chasin anadromous beasts, this could be the reset weve all been waitin for.

    Over in Washingtons Olympic Peninsula, Flylords Mag is hypin river reconnection with big logs dumped back in. Trees engineerin better habitat for wild steelhead and salmon, boostin bug life and fish cover. Smart fix for worn-out waters.

    And get this, the sports explodin with young blood. Fly Fishing Insider Podcast says participation jumped 14% in five years, 42% among twenty-somethings since 2020. Urban streams in cities are hot for newbiesless spooky fish, easy access, no Montana trek needed. Social medias got everyone tyin bugs and meetin up, Gen Z whippin their own flies just cuz.

    Man, 2026s shapin up with more conscience tooAT News calls it elevated fish handlin, watchin temps and PFAS. Whos ready to wet a line?

    Thanks for tunin in, tight lines till next week. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for me check out Quiet Please Dot A I.

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    2 分
  • Best Fly Fishing News 2025: Dam Removal Opens Epic Runs While Young Anglers Transform the Sport
    2026/04/14
    Hey folks, grab your rods and listen up, cause the fly fishing world's buzzing with some real gems right now. Picture this: you're knee-deep in a crisp mountain stream, line whispering through the air, when bam—news hits about the Klamath River finally breathing free. The Fly Shop reports four massive dams just got yanked out, the biggest removal project in US history, opening up spawning grounds for salmon and steelhead that've been blocked for over a century. Upper Klamath's gonna explode with fish—imagine those epic runs heading your way soon.

    But hold on, not all rivers are partying. Down in Colorado, Colorado Parks and Wildlife dropped a bombshell fishery survey on the Lower Blue River. Turns out, those pellet-feeding programs are overcrowding trout, spreading gill lice, and tanking populations—way worse than us floaters hooking 'em. MidCurrent and AT News say landowners are pushing a 10-year pilot permit just for floating anglers, but CPW calls angler mortality minor in this catch-and-release stretch. Time to fish smarter, locals—handle 'em gentle and watch those water temps.

    Switch gears to the good vibes: fly fishing's blowing up with young blood. The Fly Fishing Insider Podcast says participation's jumped 14% in five years, with twenty-somethings surging 42% since 2020. Urban streams near you are goldmines—less spooky fish, easy access, and Instagram crews sharing spots like crazy. No need for Montana dreams when your backyard river's calling.

    And get this, 2026's shaping up conscious. AT News predicts we'll all geek out more on catch-and-release, PFAS pollutants, and river health. Plus, Orvis is celebrating 40 years of top lodges and guides—perfect for dialing in your next solo float or private ranch escape, like those North State spots The Fly Shop's hyping to dodge crowds.

    Man, it's an exciting time to be on the water—rivers reopening, crowds thinning if we play it right, and new faces rigging up beside ya.

    Thanks for tuning in, tight lines till next week. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for me, check out Quiet Please Dot A I.

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    2 分
  • Fly Fishing Access Surges as Community Grows 42% Among Young Anglers
    2026/04/13
    # The Week in Fly Fishing: Access Wins, Fish Health Debates, and a Growing Movement

    Hey folks, welcome back to the show. If you've been paying attention to fly fishing news lately, there's some genuinely exciting stuff happening out there. Let me walk you through a few stories that should have you fired up about the state of our sport.

    First up, we're seeing some real momentum on the access front. According to MidCurrent, fly anglers have secured promises of access to miles of previously private water in just the past few months. That's huge. There's also been a major win around a storied Georgia swamp where a multi-year mining fight concluded with public access now on the table. And get this—there's a new federal directive from the Interior Department that's reframing how their lands are managed for hunting and fishing. This is exactly the kind of thing that opens up opportunities for folks who've been priced out of the best waters. Corner crossing efforts in Wyoming got killed though, so that battle's not over in all states.

    Now, here's where it gets interesting locally. The Lower Blue River in Colorado has been the subject of some serious debate about why fish populations have been dropping, and according to the December 2025 Colorado Parks and Wildlife Fishery Survey Report, the culprit might not be what everyone thought. The report flagged pellet-feeding programs as a top risk factor in overcrowding, gill lice infestations, and fish mortality. The survey found that artificial supplementation is pushing fish populations beyond their natural limits, which is driving mortality rates up. Colorado Parks and Wildlife actually noted that angler-induced mortality rates are expected to be minor compared to natural mortality. So if you've been feeling guilty about your catch-and-release sessions on the Lower Blue, you can relax a bit.

    Here's something that warms the heart though. The fly fishing community is booming and changing in ways that would've seemed impossible ten years ago. Participation rates among younger anglers have surged 42 percent since 2020 according to the Fly Fishing Insider Podcast, and the American Sportfishing Association reports that fly fishing participation has grown 14 percent in just the past five years. What's really wild is that you don't need to travel to Montana or Alaska anymore to find quality water. Urban streams and local rivers across America are becoming legitimate fly fishing destinations. The fish in these urban waters see fewer flies and are less spooky than their backcountry cousins, which makes them perfect for learning. And thanks to Instagram and YouTube, new anglers can access expertise that used to require expensive guided trips or years of local networking. Online communities are organizing local meetups and group trips too.

    Finally, there's a shift happening in how anglers are thinking about their impact. According to FlyLab, 2026 is shaping up to be a year of elevated fishing conscience, with anglers paying closer attention to catch-and-release fish handling, river temperatures, and conservation issues like PFAS pollution. People are starting to realize that how we interact with our fisheries is itself a major conservation issue.

    Thanks so much for tuning in today. Make sure you come back next week for more fly fishing news and updates. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more content, check out quietplease dot a i.

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    3 分
  • Fly Fishing Access Expands While Climate Change Threatens Wild Trout Populations Across US Rivers
    2026/04/12
    Hey folks, grab your rods and listen up—this is your local fly fishing roundup, straight from the rivers and streams makin' waves right now. First off, MidCurrent reports anglers just scored big: miles of private water openin' up, a Georgia swamp mining battle endin' with public access on the table, and a fresh federal directive from the Interior Department boostin' hunting and fishin' on public lands. That's more water for us to wade without knockin' on rancher doors.

    Out West, Colorado Parks and Wildlife's new Lower Blue River survey from December '25 is droppin' truth bombs—blamin' pellet-feedin' programs for overcrowdin', gill lice, and trout die-offs more than us floaters. Biologist Jon Ewert says fed fish push populations past natural limits, spread disease, and even big rainbows are bullyin' residents. Landowners pushin' a 10-year permit for floaters? CPW calls angler mortality minor in this catch-and-release stretch. Food for thought next time you're on the Blue.

    California's takin' hits too—CBS News says warmin' rivers are squeezin' wild trout, with 87% of U.S. and Euro rivers heatin' up per Nature research, losin' oxygen and fish. Upper Delaware's seein' fewer brookies, hurtin' local guides like Jeff Skelding from Friends of the Upper Delaware. Used to pull hundreds; now it's a different game.

    And hey, Wyoming's corner-crossin' bill to legally hop fences for public land access? Dead for now, per MidCurrent, with Montana's not hittin' lawmakers till '27 at earliest. Keep fightin' that one, boys.

    Thanks for tunin' in, tight lines till next week. This has been a Quiet Please production—for more, check out Quiet Please Dot A I.

    For more http://www.quietplease.ai

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    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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    2 分
  • California Salmon Face Extinction as Rivers Warm: New Trout and Steelhead Crisis Threatens Western Fly Fishing
    2026/04/11
    Hey folks, grab your rods and listen up—got some fresh buzz from the fly fishing scene that's got us locals talking. First off, CalTrout is sounding the alarm on California's native salmon, steelhead, and trout facing almost certain extinction thanks to warming rivers and lost oxygen, per their latest scientific assessment reported by MidCurrent. Those Sierra streams we love? Nature's cranking up the heat, just like CBS News detailed on how 87% of US and Euro rivers are warming, hitting our cold-water trout hard.

    Over in Colorado, the Lower Blue River's got drama brewing. Colorado Parks and Wildlife's December 2025 survey, straight from CPW aquatic biologist Jon Ewert, pins the trout die-offs and gill lice outbreaks on pellet-feeding programs causing overcrowding, not so much us floaters. MidCurrent and Flylab Substack note landowners like Paul Tudor Jones at Blue Valley Ranch are pushing a 10-year pilot permit for boat anglers, but CPW says angler mortality's minor under catch-and-release rules. Eye-opening stuff for us wading diehards.

    Access wins are lighting us up too—a landmark Colorado land buy, Georgia swamp public water deal, and new federal directives opening Interior lands for fishing, all per MidCurrent's spring roundup. Meanwhile, corner crossing fights fizzle in Wyoming and stall in Montana till 2027, leaving Western public land access murky.

    And heads up, US Forest Service is ditching DC for Salt Lake City, closing regional offices after DOGE slashed staff—managing 40% of our blue-ribbon trout streams, says MidCurrent. Changes ahead, brothers.

    Thanks for tuning in, tight lines out there. 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

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    2 分
  • US Fly Fishing Access Expands: New Public Waters, Shows, and Opportunities Light Up 2026
    2026/04/10
    Hey folks, gather round the fly bench, its your old pal here with the latest buzz from the US fly fishing scene thats got us locals grinning ear to ear. Picture this: youre knee-deep in some blue-ribbon trout water when boom, access just opened up like a fresh hatch. MidCurrent reports that over the last few months, fly anglers fought and won big time miles of private water now promising public rods-welcome, a nasty mining scrap around Georgias swamp wrapped with public access on the table, and a fresh federal directive shaking up Interior Department lands to boost hunting and fishing. Thats real water for us, not some guidebook dream.

    But hold your horses, not all victories stick. Wyomings push to make corner crossing legal in state law? Dead in the water, says MidCurrent, and Montanas not even teeing it up till 2027. Still, keeps the fire lit for us trespassing traditionalists.

    Now, shake off the winter blues cause the expo circuit is firing up hot. The Fly Fishing Show schedule from MidCurrent has Marlborough, Mass, January 16 to 18, Edison, New Jersey the 23rd to 25th, and Denver February 6 to 8 all lined up for 2026. Gear demos, tyers slinging bugs, and that unbeatable shop talk. Dont sleep on the Great Waters Fly Fishing Expo in St. Paul March 13 to 15, their site brags its the biggest in the region with free casting lessons, seminars, and bucks going to Minnesota Trout Unlimited. And Fly Fishers International is hyping the Sowbug Roundup in Mountain Home, Arkansas, March 26 to 28 the premier fly tying bash in the country.

    Up in California, The Fly Shop news has me itching for Shasta its a bass bonanza with 30,000 acres of spots, smallies, and largemouth screaming for poppers. Plus, those Klamath dams are finally toast after a century of blocking salmon, opening upper reaches for epic runs.

    Locals, these stories scream its a golden time to wet a line or hit the shows. Tie tight, fish hard.

    Thanks for tuning in, 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

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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    2 分
  • California Salmon and Steelhead Face Extinction Risk as New Public Fishing Access Opens Across Western States in 2025
    2026/04/09
    Hey folks, gather round the campfire, its your old pal here with the latest buzz from the fly fishing front lines. First off, CalTrout is sounding the alarm loud and clear on Californias native salmon, steelhead, and trout facing almost certain extinction events after the feds repealed that key endangerment finding, per MidCurrent reports. Theyre kicking off a big scientific assessment to track the mess, so if youre swinging flies on the Pacific Coast, keep an eye on those runs theyre hanging by a thread.

    But hey, its not all doom out West. MidCurrent also dishes on a powerhouse spring for public access: a landmark Colorado land grab opens miles of private water to us rod-wielders, Georgias swamp mining saga wraps with public fishing on deck, and a fresh federal directive from the Interior Department prioritizes angling on public lands. Wyoming and Montanas corner-crossing bills fizzled, but were still winning ground get out there before the crowds.

    Shifting gears to the fun stuff, the Fly Fishing Shows are hitting the road hard in 2025, from Marlborough and Edison to Atlanta, Seattle, Denver, and more, says the official Fly Fishing Show site and PA Fly Fish. Booths packed with gear, guides, tying demos, and brews perfect for shaking off cabin fever and scoring new toys.

    And mark your calendars for the 29th East Idaho Fly Tying and Fly Fishing Expo February 14-15, 2025, at Mountain America Center in Idaho Falls, hosted by Snake River Cutthroats per their announcement. Over a hundred tiers including national champs, workshops for ladies and kids, casting sessions, and the International Fly Fishing Film Fest Friday night. Raffles, auctions, the works its their big fundraiser for habitat.

    Man, times are exciting if youre chasing trout or bass on the fly. Thanks for tuning in, come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for me check out Quiet Please Dot A I. Tight lines!

    For more http://www.quietplease.ai

    Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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    2 分