Fly Fishing 2026: Expanded Access, Bigger Limits, and Trophy Trout Opportunities
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概要
Over in Tennessee, the Fish and Wildlife Commission just greenlit 2026-27 regs, tweaking trout rules on Big Soddy Creek in Hamilton County—delayed harvest kicks off November 1 now, and they're scrapping it on Piney River while easing Catoosa WMA closures. Tennessee Wildlife says it's effective August 1, giving locals more consistent wading access without the hassle.
Feds are opening up big too—U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service expanding sport fishing across 87,000 acres of refuges in Idaho, Montana, and Washington, aligning with state rules, no lead tackle bans to sweat. And don't sleep on the Sowbug Roundup March 26-28 in the Ozarks—Flyfishers International calls it the premier fly tying expo, with pros like Davy Wotton demoing delicate dry flies on the White and Norfork rivers. Theme's all about those picky sippers.
Policy-wise, ASA Fishing's pushing the SHARKED Act to tackle shark depredation with a new task force, and South Atlantic states are eyeing Exempted Fishing Permits for red snapper—could mean weeks of season instead of days, thanks to NOAA data fixes. Plus, Dingell-Johnson reauth coming fall, pumping more excise tax bucks into habitat and access for us all.
These changes mean more water, better shots at trophies, and less red tape—mark your calendars, check your state's regs, and get after it.
Thanks for tuning in, come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for me check out Quiet Please Dot A I.
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