Hooked Up!

Hooked Up!

Hooked Up: A Weekly Media Round-up of Fishing News


Here’s What Hunting and Conservation Groups Are Asking of the Trump Administration…according to Outdoor Life Magazine.

Troubled waters? A bill again proposes regulating commercial fishing in Wyoming.

After several failed attempts over the last few decades, a bill to regulate commercial fishing guides is back in the Legislature. HB 5 wants to give Wyoming Game and Fish, with guidance from an advisory committee, the authority to require registration for commercial fishing boats, with different fees for resident and nonresident users.

The Problem with Striped Bass Hatcheries.

With fishing that slow and concerns for the future of the striped bass stock growing, it was probably inevitable that some anglers would start talking about replacing some of the missing natural reproduction with fish grown in hatcheries.

Saving a Fish from Dying of Loneliness

Japan's loneliest sunfish heartened by fake cut-outs of human onlookers.

Sage intros new CLASSIC R8 fly rods

Sage's newest R8-built rod aims to conjure up the good old days.

Legendary Flyfishing Store Up for Sale

Step into the world of fly fishing at its finest with the extraordinary opportunity to own Bob Marriott’s Flyfishing Store, a name that has stood as a pillar of the industry for over 45 years.

Hydroelectric Dams in Oregon Kill Salmon. Congress Says It’s Time to Consider Shutting Them Down.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers wanted to use gigantic mechanical traps to haul baby fish downstream in tanker trucks.

Tripping on ketamine lifts depression in fish

The dissociative "psychedelic" drug Ketamine has been shown to be helpful in relieving depression in zebrafish. The new scientific study by Harvard researchers could increase our understanding of how ketamine works in the human brain.

Washington Tribes Crucial to Salmon Recovery, Conservation Throughout Decades of Work with State.

What a difference the stream makes for juvenile steelhead

Anybody who’s spent time in Idaho’s wild spaces can tell you that our stream systems come in many different varieties. We have small brooks that trickle over cascading rocks. We have roaring rivers that meander through valleys and slice through canyons. Most streams, however, fall somewhere in between, and one of the best things about them is the fish they produce.

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