『Wyoming and Colorado Fly Fishing Regulations 2026: What Changed for Local Anglers』のカバーアート

Wyoming and Colorado Fly Fishing Regulations 2026: What Changed for Local Anglers

Wyoming and Colorado Fly Fishing Regulations 2026: What Changed for Local Anglers

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概要

Hey locals, grab your 5-weight and settle in for some fresh fly fishing buzz straight from the US scene this 2026. First up, Wyoming Game and Fish just dropped game-changing regs effective January 1. Down on the North Platte—Miracle Mile, Gray Reef, Fremont Canyon—they're mandating single-point barbless hooks to cut down on catch-and-release injuries. Pegged attractors banned at spots like Gray Reef, and fly/lure only extended downstream to Government Bridge. Plus, Snake River below Jackson Lake Dam? Trout limit doubled to six a day, no length caps—sight-fish those big browns easier now. And Jackson Lake stays open all October, no more fall shutdown. Wyoming anglers are grinning ear to ear.

Over in Colorado, the Lower Blue River's blowing up. Colorado Parks and Wildlife's December 2025 survey calls out pellet-feeding programs for overcrowding, gill lice, and disease risks spilling into the Colorado River. Biologist Jon Ewert says fed fish push biomass past natural limits, hiking mortality on rainbows and browns. Landowners at Blue Valley Ranch, tied to billionaire Paul Tudor Jones, blame floaters and push a 10-year permit pilot, but CPW notes angler mortality's minor under catch-and-release rules. Aspen Times quotes their biologist firing back: correlation ain't causation. Tense times on that Gold Medal water—keep an eye, it could reshape access.

Then there's the feds stepping up with the MAPWaters Act, now headed to the president's desk per recent reports. Soon, you'll pull up public river and lake access on your phone—no more guesswork for wading federal waters. US Fish and Wildlife also opened 87,000 acres in Idaho, Montana, Washington refuges to sport fishing, aligning with state rules. More boots-in-water spots for us.

And looking ahead, AT News forecasts a rebound year: better snow late from La Nina, Gen Z tying bugs like pros, fly shops booming with in-person clinics, and anglers getting conscious on fish handling, river temps, PFAS. Rockies need that snowpack, but sounds promising.

Thanks for tuning in, tight lines out there. 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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