4.8 • 1.9K Ratings
🗓️ 8 September 2022
⏱️ 98 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Catch-and-release fishing for trout is not a conservation tool. It’s a way to manage trout populations for larger fish, based mainly on sociological or even political pressures. Sometimes it doesn’t even produce larger fish, and it can backfire when it inflames local anglers. Tim Traver [38:50], author of Lost in the Driftless, has spent years studying the effects of fishing regulations on both fish and human populations and I think your eyes will open to the limitations of regulations like “fly-fishing only” or “catch-and-release”.
In the Fly Box this week, we have lots of interesting questions and comments from listeners, including:
What can I do to avoid crowds on a heavily pressured eastern trout stream?
What is the best way to carry a net when using a sling bag?
A listener has some great comments on why bamboo rods are so special.
Why am I consistently breaking off large brown trout using 6X tippet?
If I don’t have a fishing backpack or vest, how can I carry a net?
How can I fish very fast water effectively with a dry dropper rig?
If most fish food is dull colored, why do we use so many wild colors in our flies?
A listener makes some great points on why fishing close to home is desirable.
A physicist weighs in on what a trout can see from underwater.
Can I effectively Euro-nymph with my 9-foot, 5-inch Blackout rod?
What are some good uses for squirrel tail in fly tying?
What is everyone doing in the northeast for fly fishing during the drought?
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | Hi, and welcome to the Orvis Fly Fishing Podcast. |
0:13.8 | This is your host, Tom Rosenbauer, and my guest this week is Tim Traver, author of a |
0:20.4 | book called Lost in the Driftless, which is an excellent book. |
0:24.9 | And yes, it's about the Driftless region of Wisconsin. |
0:27.6 | It's more about the effects of catch and release on both fish populations and human populations. |
0:35.7 | And we're going to explore some reasons why catch and release doesn't always work. |
0:43.0 | So I think you'll enjoy it. |
0:44.6 | It's a thought-provoking topic. |
0:47.7 | And you may disagree with some of the things Tim and I talk about. |
0:52.2 | And if so, you're welcome to send a comment to me in the podcast mailbox. |
0:59.9 | And speaking of the podcast mailbox, if you have a question for me that you'd like me |
1:06.2 | to try to answer on there, you can send it to me at podcast at orvis.com. |
1:14.5 | You can either just type your question in the email or you can attach a voice file. |
1:20.1 | And if I can answer it or I want to answer it, I'll read it on the air. |
1:25.2 | So without further ado, before we talk about catch and release, let's do the podcast. |
1:32.4 | Let me let's do the flybox. |
1:35.1 | And the first question this week is from Henry. |
1:39.6 | First I want to say that I love the podcast and it has been a great source of fishing |
1:43.4 | wisdom to me over the past few years. |
1:46.3 | I especially enjoy listening to the flybox and picking out bits and pieces of advice |
1:51.1 | and trying them myself is I'm a young angler and love nerding out to new techniques to |
1:56.7 | catching fish. |
... |
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