4.8 • 1.9K Ratings
🗓️ 1 October 2021
⏱️ 90 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
In this week's podcast, my guest is David Brooks [43:45], executive director of Montana Trout Unlimited. With prevailing drought conditions in the western United Sates and increased demand from many users, from agriculture to municipalities to recreational angling, how can we balance the use of water? David explains the difference between the riparian doctrine used mostly in the eastern United Sates, and the prior appropriation doctrine used in western states, and explains how users have come together to apportion water for human use and for keeping enough water in rivers to support healthy trout populations. It's not easy and often contentious but it's a fascinating issue and there is hope that with wise use of water by all stakeholders we can support ranchers, farmers, cities, and healthy trout populations.
In the Fly Box this week, we have some interesting questions and tips, including:
A note from The Mayfly Project on cities where they're looking for volunteers to help mentor foster kids in fly fishing
When I catch a fish and it jumps all over the pool, does that spook other fish?
What is the best way to kill and prepare a trout for eating?
How much distance do you gain from the double haul?
What are the reasons for strip setting in salt water and not for trout?
A tip on keeping your fly line from falling back inside the guides when making shorts casts on small streams
A heartwarming thank-you note to Nick Lyons
How can I keep my flies in the strike zone longer in fast-moving saltwater current?
What is the best way to light a fly while it's in the vise?
Why did people in a fly shop tell me that Euro nymphing is cheating?
What is an appropriate amount to tip a guide, and is it the same from multiple days as it is for a single day?
When the kokanee start running up into my trout stream the trout stop biting. Why?
Which way would you lean for a dry-fly specific rod?
My guide puts his thumb in the mouth of smallmouth bass to revive them. Is this effective and would it be valid for other species?
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0:00.0 | Hi and welcome to the Orvis Fly Fishing Podcast. |
0:15.4 | This is your host Tom Rosenbauer and in today's show I'm going to be interviewing David Brooks |
0:22.6 | who is the executive director of Montana Trout Unlimited and we're going to be talking |
0:28.4 | about water law and water appropriation specifically in Montana but it applies to a lot of the |
0:36.4 | American West. |
0:37.4 | After a particularly dry summer when there wasn't enough water to go around, how is water |
0:43.9 | allocated between the various users and how do we maintain in stream flows to make sure |
0:52.0 | that we have healthy trout streams during these difficult times. |
0:56.2 | I feel it's a fascinating subject and I hope you agree and I think you'll learn quite a bit |
1:02.9 | about water law and speaking of which, I promised you that I'd be giving you some recommended books |
1:13.4 | to read on various subjects and if you're interested in water law and water use, the ultimate |
1:24.9 | book, the iconic book of water use in American West is a book called Cadillac Desert by Mark |
1:32.4 | Reisner. |
1:33.4 | It's a classic, it's an older book but it's still as valid today as it was when it was |
1:39.6 | first written and I would highly recommend that you, if you're interested in the subject |
1:45.8 | that you, if you haven't read it already, if you read that you read Cadillac Desert and |
1:52.3 | another book that might be of some interest is by the great Western writer Wallace Stegner |
2:00.8 | and it's called Beyond the 100th Meridian and this is a, really it's about John Wesley Powell |
2:08.8 | and his exploration of Western rivers but it's also very prophetic and Powell's ideas on why it |
2:18.1 | would be very difficult to settle the American West really still resonate today so those are |
2:25.6 | a couple books obviously outside of the fly fishing world but I think they'll go a long way toward |
2:32.6 | your education as an environmentalist and a naturalist and I have another announcement. |
... |
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