
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Show Notes: Https://wetfyswing.com/847B
Presented By: Mountain Waters Resort.
Sponsors:https://wetflyswing.com/sponsors
Atlantic Canada is home to some of the most storied salmon rivers in the world—and to one of the quiet powerhouses working behind the scenes to protect them. In this episode of the Wet Fly Swing Podcast, host Dave talks with Charline McCoy, executive director of the Foundation for Conservation of Atlantic Salmon (FCAS), about how a tiny team is helping safeguard Canada's wild Atlantic salmon across five provinces.
From replacing culverts and removing old dams to planting riparian trees and funding climate-focused research, Charline walks us through how FCAS has supported hundreds of conservation projects—and helped open up nearly 199 million square meters of salmon habitat. You'll also hear how warming rivers, shifting flows, and invasive species are changing the game for salmon, and why collaboration between governments, scientists, anglers, and local watershed groups has never been more important.
By Dave Stewart4.7
493493 ratings
Show Notes: Https://wetfyswing.com/847B
Presented By: Mountain Waters Resort.
Sponsors:https://wetflyswing.com/sponsors
Atlantic Canada is home to some of the most storied salmon rivers in the world—and to one of the quiet powerhouses working behind the scenes to protect them. In this episode of the Wet Fly Swing Podcast, host Dave talks with Charline McCoy, executive director of the Foundation for Conservation of Atlantic Salmon (FCAS), about how a tiny team is helping safeguard Canada's wild Atlantic salmon across five provinces.
From replacing culverts and removing old dams to planting riparian trees and funding climate-focused research, Charline walks us through how FCAS has supported hundreds of conservation projects—and helped open up nearly 199 million square meters of salmon habitat. You'll also hear how warming rivers, shifting flows, and invasive species are changing the game for salmon, and why collaboration between governments, scientists, anglers, and local watershed groups has never been more important.

1,930 Listeners

157 Listeners

1,345 Listeners

202 Listeners

404 Listeners

103 Listeners

177 Listeners

1,042 Listeners

183 Listeners

137 Listeners

913 Listeners

599 Listeners

331 Listeners

27 Listeners

101 Listeners