Bright midday winter creek with clear water and sunlit gravel bottom

How to Spot Trout in Winter (When the Water Looks Empty)

Winter trout fishing starts long before the first cast. In cold water, trout don’t give themselves away the way they do in summer. There are no splashy rises, no nervous flickers along the bank, no obvious movement to lock onto. Most winter water looks empty because, at first glance, it is. But it isn’t. Trout

Fly fisherman standing in a sunlit mountain stream at midday

How Fly Fishing for Trout Changed My Life

I didn’t start fly fishing because I was searching for meaning. I started because I liked rivers, I liked being outside, and I liked the idea of doing something that couldn’t be rushed. At the time, that felt incidental. Looking back, it wasn’t. Fly fishing for trout didn’t change my life in the dramatic, cinematic

Native Americans fishing for trout

Were Trout Around for American Indians? And Did They Value Them?

If you stand in a cold mountain creek long enough, you eventually realize something simple: this water has been moving long before you arrived, and the fish in it are not new. So the question isn’t whether trout were around for American Indians. The real question is how they understood them. Trout Were Absolutely Native

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