The decline of participation in hunting and fishing activities continues to fall; the latest evidence coming via Newsweek magazine (pointed out by Alert Underground Reader kbarton):

Fishing participation fell three times the rate of hunting over five years—down a jaw-dropping 23 percent in the Great Lakes region. Freshwater fishing outside the Great Lakes was off 10 percent; saltwater fishing fell by 15 percent.

In 2006, 13 percent of the U.S. population still took the rod and reel out for a cast. Nearly 30 million people—five million less than 2001-went fishing, spending an average of 17 days angling during the year. They dropped about $40 billion on licenses, equipment and trips to support the activity.

Newsweek trots out all the usual suspects to explain the decline, and it’s hard to disagree with a lot of them. A focus on non blood sports, less family interest in the outdoors, the urbanization of the population — all are reasonable.

(At least nobody blamed the Trout Underground for the decline, which is good — most of my readers would probably agree.)

While fly fishing only numbers weren’t available, it’s clear that fly fishing isn’t the trendy sport it once was. When I moved up here, I rarely fished weekends due to crowding.

Nowadays, it doesn’t matter all that much. Sure, that’s anecdotal instead of statistically significant, but there it is. The real question is this: are we supposed to stop the decline, or accept it as a cyclical thing?

See you on the (empty, people-less) river, Tom Chandler

[tags]fishing, newsweek, hunting[/tags]