# 2026 Fly Fishing: What You Need to Know
Hey folks, welcome back. Whether you're hitting the water this spring or planning your next adventure, there's some serious stuff happening in fly fishing right now that's worth paying attention to.
First up, let's talk about Wyoming because something huge just went down. According to Wyoming Game and Fish Department, Jackson Lake is now open year-round starting in 2026. For seventy years, this lake closed in October. That's seven decades of anglers locked out during fall spawning season. Now the Snake River between Jackson Lake Dam and the gauging station has doubled its daily trout limit from three to six fish, and they've removed length restrictions. If you've been eyeing that water, this is your moment.
But here's the catch with new opportunity. Wyoming Game and Fish also tightened regulations on the North Platte River's high-traffic stretches. Below Seminoe Reservoir on the Miracle Mile, Alcova Afterbay, Gray Reef, and Fremont Canyon, you're now required to use single-point barbless hooks. They've banned pegged attractors at Fremont Canyon and Gray Reef, and extended the fly-and-lure-only rule further downstream. The reason is solid though. These changes are designed to reduce hook injuries on catch-and-release fish and protect spawning rainbow trout with a new closure from April first through May fifteenth at Gray Reef.
Now let's shift to Colorado because there's genuine drama unfolding on the Lower Blue River. According to a Colorado Parks and Wildlife fishery survey report released in December 2025, the real problem isn't floating anglers like some landowners claim. It's the pellet-feeding programs. Jon Ewert, an aquatic biologist for Colorado Parks and Wildlife, found that fish feeding is creating overcrowding and gill lice infestations that are spreading disease through the system. These artificially fed fish are displacing native trout and driving higher natural mortality rates. What makes this really concerning is that these diseased fish have direct access to Gold Medal reaches of the Colorado River, which could spread problems downstream across the entire watershed. This controversy matters because wealthy landowners are pushing for permit systems to restrict public access, but the science suggests the real culprit is something entirely different.
Finally, there's legislative good news. According to sportfishing advocacy sources, the MAPWaters Act, also called the Modernizing Access to Public Waters Act, has already passed the Senate and is heading to the president's desk. Once signed into law, this means boaters and anglers will be able to easily find information about access to federal rivers and lakes right from their phones or computers. It sounds technical, but it's huge for access.
Thanks for tuning in. Come back next week for more updates on what's happening in fly fishing. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out Quiet Please dot A I.
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