Articles

Legends of the swamp

Changes were coming to Atchafalaya
Photo: Chris Hunt

There were legends in the swamp, and Billy Guidry knew it. Some of them crawled and swam, like Gus, the infamous 14-foot gator that hung out near the put-in and dined on ham sandwiches and lunch scraps the tourists fed him. Gus was beloved. A gentle giant, they all said.

The locals just shook their heads and whistled low under their breath.

Fly fishing trade group sharply denounces Trump administration's tariff increases

Costs of China trade war will be paid by anglers, AFFTA says
Photo: Isac Nóbrega/PR / cc2.0.

Joining the chorus of voices condemning the Trump administration's ongoing trade war with China, the American Fly Fishing Trade Association (AFFTA) recently released a statement denouncing the administration's decisions as "unfair" and "harmful" to the $1 billion fly fishing industry, an industry whose backbone, AFTTA says, is small and medium-sized businesses.

I shot Muldowney

And you would have too
Photo: Pat Chattack / cc2.0 modified.

I shot Muldowney, and you would've shot that double-crossing low-holer too. Except once I tell you what he did, you would've filleted him out and fed his bones to your dogs, meaning between you and me, I'm the one who showed restraint. Course everybody always figured it, but nobody could prove it, so I was left alone on the water for 40 years to tend my traps. But now they stuck a camera up my ass and I'm going to die of cancer, so I don't mind who knows it.

The fish that made a river famous

Is catch and release killing cutthroat restoration efforts on the South Fork?
A pair of Yellowstone cutthroat trout (photo: Pay Clayon / Fish Eye Guy Photography).

If the determining factor in the effort to save the native Yellowstone cutthroat trout of Idaho’s South Fork of the Snake River is how hard cutthroats fight at the end of a leader … well, then, the fight is already lost.

Hanging by a thread

The future of fishing is in serious peril
Smoke from a wildfire nearly obscures the sun near the author's home (photo: Todd Tanner).

We’re anglers. We focus on our next big fish, or our next session at the tying vice, or our next trip to Alaska or Montana or the Florida Keys. We swap stories, and we share photos, and we fixate on the big one that got away.

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