『"USA Youth Fly Fishing Team Dominates World Championship: A Roundup of Fly Fishing News and Trends Across the Country"』のカバーアート

"USA Youth Fly Fishing Team Dominates World Championship: A Roundup of Fly Fishing News and Trends Across the Country"

"USA Youth Fly Fishing Team Dominates World Championship: A Roundup of Fly Fishing News and Trends Across the Country"

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

このコンテンツについて

Fly fishing folks, it’s been an electric few weeks from coast to coast. Here’s what's buzzing right now on streams, in shops, and even out in Idaho where Team USA took home the gold at the 22nd FIPS-Mouche World Youth Fly Fishing Championship. The US Youth Fly Fishing Team absolutely dominated—47 top young guns from eight countries battled it out over five venues in the Golden Triangle of Fly Fishing that stretches from Montana through Wyoming and into Idaho. Talk about a proud moment for locals who know those waters. If you know anyone under 18, tell them to check out the upcoming regional clinics in Idaho Falls this July. These Team USA kids are showing the rest of the world what “western water tactics” are all about—and yeah, the next generation is officially hooked.

Meanwhile, if Michigan’s your home river, don’t show up without a copy of the new fishing regs. According to the Michigan Department of Natural Resources, the 2025 season brought a slew of changes—especially for steelheaders. Some streams dropped the 20-inch minimum size limit, but the daily possession limit’s still one. Muskellunge hunters, you’re now looking at a 50-inch minimum size in Thornapple Lake and Lake Hudson. Don’t even think about spearing in the ports of Grand Haven, Muskegon, or Whitehall/Montague this November. Single-pointed hook rules are in play for those waters, and enforcement’s strict this year as the DNR continues cultivating a population of Great Lakes-strain muskies for future stockings. Before you tie on, check the Michigan Fishing Regulations guide or get the Hunt Fish app loaded.

Not enough? Here’s more local flavor. The California crew in the Eastern Sierra is already booking out for spring and summer. The season starts slow with cold, low flows—classic winter struggle—but the guides at Golden Trout Guiding Co. say to get your name down now for their spring clinic on the Owens River in April if you’re new or rusty. For veterans, the epic Golden Trout Excursion fires up this July and August. These trips go deep into remote creeks for pure-strain goldens—a true bucket-list adventure. Some days, they’re reporting 40 to 100 topwater takes! If you love dry flies and backcountry camping, you’ll want a spot. They haul camp for you. All you have to do is hike, fish, and eat five-star grub by the water. Serious fishy friends are made on these trips, so get on the waitlist if you’re interested.

And what’s happening in the shops? Angling Trade says the core of fly fishers are still hitting rivers hard, but the “pandemic newbies” wave is flattening out—some stuck with it, others drifted away. Travel is up, especially regional travel: folks road-tripping with rods to get their fix even if big-ticket gear isn’t flying off shelves. If you’ve noticed more Texans on Colorado streams this year, you’re right—shops reported record numbers through Independence Day, and guided trips sold out. The buzz in gear is mellow, but one shop’s advice: keep an eye out for the next cool high-end rod release and support your locals.

That’s the down-low—Team USA’s got gold, Michigan’s got new regulations, California’s prepping golden trout adventures, and the fly fishing faithful everywhere are making old spots feel new again. Thanks for tuning in to this week’s rundown. Come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for more info, check out Quiet Please Dot A I.

For more http://www.quietplease.ai

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
まだレビューはありません