『2026 Fly Fishing Access Explodes: MAPWaters Act Opens Public Waters While Western States Expand Opportunities』のカバーアート

2026 Fly Fishing Access Explodes: MAPWaters Act Opens Public Waters While Western States Expand Opportunities

2026 Fly Fishing Access Explodes: MAPWaters Act Opens Public Waters While Western States Expand Opportunities

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概要

# 2026 Fly Fishing: The Year of Change

Hey everyone, welcome back. If you've been paying attention to what's happening in fly fishing right now, there's some seriously wild stuff going down that's worth talking about.

First up, let's talk about what might be the biggest access win in decades. The MAPWaters Act just passed the Senate and is heading to the President's desk to become law. In plain English, this means you'll soon be able to pull up your phone or computer and find all the public waters you can legally fish on federal rivers and lakes. No more mysterious spreadsheets or calling some ranger station that never picks up. Game changer.

Out West, Wyoming just dropped a bombshell. They ended a seventy-year closure on the Snake River near Jackson Lake in October, which means fall lake trout season just opened up. But here's the kicker that'll make fly anglers happy: the daily trout limit on the tailwater below the dam jumped from three to six fish, with no length caps on the abundant brown trout. We're talking sight-fishing opportunities that didn't exist last season.

Then there's the Blue River situation in Colorado, and it's getting spicy. The state released a fishery survey that basically calls out pellet feeding programs as the primary culprit killing fish, not floating anglers like some landowners claimed. According to Colorado Parks and Wildlife, these artificial feeding programs are causing overcrowding and spreading gill lice like wildfire. The biologist on the report straight up said fish feeding can displace resident trout and cause higher natural mortality. Meanwhile, some mega-wealthy landowners are trying to push a permit system to restrict floaters. The irony isn't lost on anyone paying attention.

Last thing: if you haven't noticed, fly tying is exploding. Gen Z anglers are picking up the vice not to save money, but because they actually want to build their own flies. Industry experts are calling it a hot segment for 2026, and you're seeing it everywhere. The hobby is becoming cool again in a whole new way.

That's what's shaking up the fly fishing world right now. Thanks so much for tuning in. Come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out Quiet Please dot A I.

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