The Best Anglers Never Stop Learning
The Best Anglers Never Stop Learning
A lifelong angler, Phil Monahan began his career in fly fishing working as a guide in Alaska and Montana from 1992-1995. After a brief stint as an editor at Outdoor Life, he became the Editor-in-Chief of American Angler, a national fly-fishing magazine, which he ran for more than a decade. In 2010, he launched the Orvis Fly Fishing blog, creating more than 8,000 posts over the next 14 years. He’s been the Editor-in-Chief of MidCurrent since December 2024.
Phil is passionate about wild fish and the places they live, whether that’s the Battenkill five minutes from his home or the rivers of Alaska’s Bristol Bay region. His angling travels around the world have convinced him that conserving these special places for future generations is vital.
I was about nine years old, floating down a river in New Hampshire in an old, beat-up rowboat. Aimlessly chucking a Mepp’s Black Fury behind the boat, I daydreamed as I watched the mud swallows dart in and out of their holes in the high river bank. Nearing the take-out, I cast one more time and began reeling like a madman because I couldn’t wait to head in. But as I lifted the flashing black-and-gold spinner out of the water for the last time, the little trout appeared behind it—materializing, it seemed, out of thin air. After a valiant leap for a lure that was half its size, the fish disappeared the second it hit the water.
I sat there mesmerized, not sure if what I’d seen was real. I felt as if I’d come in contact with something remarkable, something that contrasted sharply with the materiality of my childhood world. When I try to trace my lifelong love of trout and the rivers they inhabit, I always end up back at that first, brief encounter with a wild brook trout.
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Copyright © 2003 – 2025 MidCurrent LLC, All Rights Reserved.