『Fly Fishing Shows 2026: Big Events, Competitions, and Conservation News You Missed』のカバーアート

Fly Fishing Shows 2026: Big Events, Competitions, and Conservation News You Missed

Fly Fishing Shows 2026: Big Events, Competitions, and Conservation News You Missed

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If you’ve been out on the water more than you’ve been online lately, here’s what’s been happening in the fly fishing world around the U.S., in plain river-talk. First up, the big circus is coming back to town. The Fly Fishing Show announced its 2026 run with stops in Edison, Denver, and the Seattle/Bellevue area, and it’s shaping up like the Super Bowl for gear junkies. According to African Waters, the Edison show hits in late January at the New Jersey Convention & Exposition Center, with Denver and Bellevue following in February. Think wall‑to‑wall fly tiers, new rods you absolutely don’t need but will somehow justify, destination talks that have you checking vacation days on your phone, and enough tying materials to fill a drift boat. If you’ve been fishing the same 5-weight for a decade and swearing you’re “totally fine,” this tour is where that lie goes to die. Out West, Idaho’s keeping its rep as a hardcore trout hub. The Mountain America Center is hosting the 30th Annual East Idaho Fly Tying & Fly Fishing Expo in Idaho Falls in March 2026. They’ve already lined up tiers, classes, and vendors, and the 2025 expo is free to the public, so locals are expecting another big turnout. It’s one of those events where you can watch a guy whip up a size 22 midge in about 30 seconds, then immediately realize you’ve been overdubbing your own flies with way too much material for years. If you’re anywhere near the Snake or Henry’s Fork, this is basically the winter warm‑up before runoff chaos. Competition junkies have something to watch too. Fly Fishing Team USA continues to run its competition cycles, where anglers grind through multiple events over roughly a year and a half to earn points and try to make the national team. According to Fly Fishing Team USA’s competition page, these cycles decide who represents the U.S. at world-level events. If you’ve ever wondered how good you really are at tight‑lining and reading micro‑currents, these folks will make you feel like you’re just out there “casting vibes.” But it’s also pushing modern techniques into the mainstream—more anglers nymphing Euro‑style, thinking about drift angles, and treating a 12-inch wild fish like a chess match instead of a random miracle. On the conservation front, Hatch Magazine has been tracking some tougher news that matters if you care about where your flies actually land. They’ve reported stories like reservoirs being drained and critical trout water getting hammered, the kind of management decisions that can erase a fishery in a season. It’s the reminder none of us want but all of us need: those perfect drifts and grip‑and‑grin shots depend on boring stuff like water policy meetings and habitat work. The upside is that every time these stories hit the news, more anglers show up, speak up, and donate to the local groups doing the unglamorous work. Alright, that’s the run‑down for this week: big shows loading up the calendar, Idaho keeping the tying flame lit, Team USA sharpening the competitive edge, and conservation still the river’s referee. 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 QuietPlease dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
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