Fly Fishing Boom: Women, Purists, and Beginners Reshaping American Rivers in 2024
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概要
First off, rivers from Colorado's Frying Pan to Idaho's South Fork Snake and Montana's Madison are packed tighter than a mayfly hatch. Hatch Magazine says the angling pressure's smashed the big '90s boom—more rods on the water than ever, even after folks stuck close to home last year. If you're hittin' those spots, pack your patience, brother.
Then there's the ladies takin' over. NBC Nightly News spotlighted United Women on the Fly, linkin' gals nationwide who call it "yoga on the water." Friendship, casts, and big browns—sign me up for that crew meetup.
Don't sleep on the purists either. Daily Herald profiled Mark Domagalski from Campton Hills, craftin' his own flies and livin' that zen life where landin' a fish is just the cherry on top. Pure art, no shortcuts—makes you wanna tie a dozen tonight.
And YouTube's buzzin' with why it's explodin': one vid from the pandemic era shows newbies flockin' to fly fishin's roots, with vets who've chased trout for 50-plus years and even a nonagenarian "Queen of American fly fishing." Enchantin' as hell, pullin' in legions.
These stories got the blood pumpin'? Get out there, locals—tight lines.
Thanks for tunin' in, and 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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