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50 million anglers

How can we address the biggest threat to our fly fishing?
Aerial view of the Bridge Fire on Angeles National Forest on September 9, 2024 (photo: USDA Forest Service / cc2.0).

Climate change may not be making many headlines right now, but that’s only because presidential candidates Kamala Harris and Donald Trump are sucking all the oxygen from the room.

Sleeping dogs

Zeppelin will have none of it
Photo: Mike Sepelak.

I try to let sleeping dogs lie but Zeppelin will have none of it. He seemed deep in his dreams at the foot of the bed when I slipped down the dark hallway to the kitchen, but, as I stand at the counter eating a hasty bowl of cereal, I hear the whisper of pads on hardwood, a breathy harrumph, and the soft thump of old bones settling to the floor beside me. I reach down and scratch his head.

Carpin' for smallmouth

In the height of summer, smallmouth and carp have a relationship akin to permit and stingrays
Photo: Matt Reilly.

“Damn clouds.”

In a demonstration of what may be one of my most regrettable and predictable behaviors, burdened by the lowering of light level as a cloud moved between me and the sun, I glanced towards the heavens to assess the duration of the timeout at hand, only to be temporarily blinded by that big ball of fire in the sky as it slipped behind the veil.

“Now I definitely can’t see anything.”

Review: Korkers Stealth Sneaker wading boots

The most comfortable wading boots I've ever worn
Photo: Korkers.

Korkers new Stealth Sneaker is a hybrid of the wading shoes we’ve seen grow in popularity lately and the tried-and-true wading boots we’ve used for decades. It’s also the single most unique piece of wading gear I’ve ever reviewed, and far and away the most comfortable.

3 Yellowstone National Park rivers with great fall fishing

When the crowds and the heat of summer are gone, these fisheries come alive
Fishing below famed Gibbon Falls in Yellowstone National Park (photo: Chad Shmukler).

To the natural world within the confines of Yellowstone National Park, the nebulous date at the tail end of summer when the vast majority of the human population “migrates” elsewhere must seem a complete mystery. One day, there’s a two-hour-long traffic jam between West Yellowstone and Madison Junction, and the next, the cars are just all gone.

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