From SIMMS: To Support Healthy, Sustainable Fisheries, Simms Pledges 1% of All Ecommerce Sales. Simms Fishing Products, manufacturer of waders,…
Browsing: Industry News
Earlier this summer, our team sat down with our ambassadors after a few days of fishing in Colorado. One key insight we gathered from the team was, “we need to create a cupholder for rafts.”
From Bonefish & Tarpon Trust: Bonefish & Tarpon Trust, whose mission is to conserve bonefish, tarpon and permit fisheries through…
From Newport: Newport, a leading innovator of clean electric technology in the boating and angling industry, has selected Frontier Sales…
FROM TRCP: Anglers and hunters applaud bill that would digitize recreational access information on federal waterways (Washington D.C.)—Today, the Theodore…
Open to all ages…grab your GEAR…you can’t lose. In a smart reach out to the bass/gear world, Bajio Sunglasses will…
1. All the time! It’s my number-one fish species.
2. Several times a year at least, but it’s not my number-one fish.
3. Several times a year at least, but not with flies and a fly rod. Just gear.
4. A few times a year, depending on what else is going on.
5. Once in a great while… it’s been a year or so,
6. Never.
Filmmaker, videographer, and photographer Harrison Buck has announced a feature film project focused on the impacts of climate change on the livelihoods of two of Grand Bahama’s original fly fishing guide families, produced by Buck’s production company Pandion Creative. Entitled Meko, the feature produced and directed by Buck is a juxtaposition of a society built upon mass tourism and the realities and hardships that hide behind that curtain.
Go to flyfishingjobs.com to solve the problems. It’s always hard to find good staff. That’s been especially tough in the…
From USAC: Mark your calendars! The 2023 USAC General Membership meeting will be held this year on Thursday, December 7,…
From TRCP (Hunters & Anglers for the Brooks Range): Opposition to the proposed Ambler Industrial Road continues to grow November…
Trout fishing with nymph flies, split shot and a strike indicator is to dry-fly (or streamer) fishing what the “Kars4Kids” jingle is to the Beatles’ “White Album.”
1. It’s a mortal angling sin, and should be outlawed.
2. It’s a great way to catch big “personal record” fish!
3. It’s kinda bad, but not that big a deal.
4. It really depends on the species, the place, and the methods used.
5. What are redds?