『2026 Fly Fishing: Collapsing Stripers, Controversial Stocking, and Triumphant Regulations』のカバーアート

2026 Fly Fishing: Collapsing Stripers, Controversial Stocking, and Triumphant Regulations

2026 Fly Fishing: Collapsing Stripers, Controversial Stocking, and Triumphant Regulations

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# 2026 Fly Fishing: A Year of Surprises, Controversies, and Opportunity

Hey everyone, welcome back to the show. If you've been paying attention to fly fishing news lately, there's some genuinely wild stuff happening across the country right now that's worth your time. Let's dive into what's really moving the needle for us fly folks in 2026.

First up, striped bass anglers along the Atlantic coast got some mixed news from the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission back in October. According to the ASMFC, regulators decided to keep the current slot limits and bag limits exactly as they are, rejecting a proposal to cut harvest by 12 percent. On the surface, that sounds great for anglers who want to keep fishing hard. But here's where it gets interesting: conservation groups like the American Saltwater Guides Association are calling this decision a gamble with the fishery's future. The real problem lurking underneath all this regulatory posturing is something way darker—a catastrophic collapse in striped bass recruitment that's been going on for years. Basically, we're not producing enough young fish to replace what we're catching. So while you'll still be able to keep your one fish in the 28 to 31 inch slot this spring, fishing guides and serious anglers are quietly freaking out about whether there will actually be fish to catch in ten years.

Now let's talk about Colorado's Lower Blue River, because this one has some real drama attached to it. According to a December 2025 fishery survey released by Colorado Parks and Wildlife, it turns out that floating anglers might not be the bad guys in the story everyone's been telling. The actual culprit? Fish feeding programs. Jon Ewert, an aquatic biologist for the state, found that the river's pellet-feeding operations are creating overcrowding and spreading gill lice infestations that are killing trout. The report basically says that when you artificially pump fish into a system beyond what the river can naturally support, you get disease and mortality, not healthy populations. This matters because wealthy landowners in the area, including hedge fund billionaire Paul Tudor Jones, have been pushing a ten-year permitting system to limit floating anglers instead of addressing the real issue. The irony is that the state's own data shows angler-induced mortality in this catch-and-release section is minor compared to what the feeding programs are doing. So the whole access debate might actually be built on bad science.

And finally, if you fish in Wyoming, buckle up because something genuinely exciting just happened. According to the Wyoming Game and Fish Department, Jackson Lake is now open to fishing in October for the first time in seventy years. That October closure is gone. Beyond that, the tailwater below the dam got some serious love too—the daily trout limit jumped from three fish to six, with no length restrictions on abundant brown trout. That means you and your buddies can actually keep some fish and sight-fish for the bigger cutthroats without worrying about tiny slot limits. Plus, new rules requiring single-point barbless hooks on stretches of the North Platte River are helping reduce injury on catch-and-release fish, which is the kind of smart management that actually works.

These three stories tell you everything you need to know about 2026 in fly fishing: we've got real conservation problems that need serious solutions, not scapegoating, and we've got some genuinely smart regulatory moves happening in places that are willing to listen to actual science.

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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