『2026 Fly Fishing Events: National Championships, Competitions & Expos Guide for US Anglers』のカバーアート

2026 Fly Fishing Events: National Championships, Competitions & Expos Guide for US Anglers

2026 Fly Fishing Events: National Championships, Competitions & Expos Guide for US Anglers

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If you’ve been tying more than you’ve been checking the news lately, here’s what’s been happening in the fly world here in the States. First up, competition junkies have something big on the horizon. USAngling says registration is open for the 2026 USA Fly Fishing Youth Team National Championship on Lake George, Colorado, running April 24–26, 2026. That’s right: a full national championship built around our style of fishing, with young sticks learning beats, rotating sectors, and managing fish like they’re in a world championship session. If you’ve got a kid who can out‑cast you already, this is where they go to prove it. On the grown‑up side of the game, Fly Fishing Team USA continues to stack events in their competition “cycle,” giving serious anglers a way to earn points and maybe land a spot on the big stage. According to Fly Fishing Team USA, their comp schedule is designed so you can fish your way from local events all the way to international representation. If you’ve ever thought, “I could hang with those Euro‑nymphing machines,” here’s your chance to find out for real, with judges, beats, and no fish stories allowed. If you’re more about shows and gear than stopwatches and scorecards, the Fly Fishing Show is lining up another busy U.S. run. The official Fly Fishing Show site lists 2026 stops in places like Edison, New Jersey; Denver, Colorado; and the Seattle/Bellevue area, with casting ponds, presentations, and an ocean of fly bins to get lost in. African Waters, which is traveling with the show, broke down some of those dates and locations and it looks like the same shoulder‑to‑shoulder vibe: big-name tiers working at the vise, travel reps pitching dream trips, and way too many rods you’ll “just cast once” and then somehow end up buying. Out West, the East Idaho Fly Tying & Fly Fishing Expo is keeping the craft side alive. The Mountain America Center notes that the 30th Annual Expo is set to return to Idaho Falls in March 2026, with the 29th running in February 2025. Think rows of tiers spinning bugs you’ve never heard of, classes on everything from deer hair to Spey, and a crowd that still cares more about clean wraps than influencer followers. If you’re the kind of person who judges someone by the size of their scrap-cutting pile next to the vise, this one’s basically homecoming. Gearheads haven’t been left out either. Hatch Magazine’s news section has been rolling out “New fly fishing gear” rundowns, including a May 2026 feature that pulls together what’s new on and off the water. It’s the usual candy store: fresh rod series, updated lines, packs with more attachment points than you have tools, and enough niche gadgets to completely re‑organize your boat bag for no good reason other than “this is kind of cool.” And keeping everyone tied together, Orvis News and MidCurrent keep pushing out the steady drip of tips, conservation blurbs, and fish stories we all read when we should be working. Orvis News has been running its usual mix of technique pieces and fishery updates, while MidCurrent keeps the long‑form essays and how‑tos coming for folks who really want to geek out. That’s the latest from the side of the news cycle that smells like floatant and wet waders instead of cable TV studios. 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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