VOL. 14 · NO. 25 June 17, 2026 · Bozeman, MT LIVE · 6 RIVERS TRACKED · TOURNAMENTS THIS WEEK
THE WIRE
FISHINGExperience Montana’s Free Fishing Days This Father’s DayJun 17 FISHINGMastering Fly Selection: The Rock Method for Trout FishingJun 17 HUNTINGCan Arkansas Hunters Really Prepare for a Montana Spring Bear Hunt? Deadhaul…Jun 17 CONSERVATIONBeavers Rewilded 12,000 Montana Wetland Acres Better Than Anyone ExpectedJun 17 HUNTINGWildlife Policy Battle: Sportsmen Defend Hunting TraditionsJun 17
Fwp — FWP AIS LEADERBOARD

From Trophy Catch to Technicality

Cliff Chamberlan reeled in a 6.1-pound pink salmon on the Salmon River…but why was his catch unrecognized?

Cliff Chamberlan has been chasing salmon on New York’s Salmon River since the 1970s, pulling in monsters like a 38-pound Chinook, but this summer he hooked the fish of a lifetime—a 6.1-pound pink salmon that crushed New York’s decades-old record. For a few breathless hours, Chamberlan was on top of the world—until DEC told him the pink salmon category had been “retired” in last year’s bureaucratic cleanup, erasing his record before the ink was dry. “I went from the highest high to the lowest low in about five hours,” he groaned. Still, for a man who fishes every day like a windmill just for the joy of the drift, the catch stands as proof that unicorns do swim in the Salmon River—even if Albany won’t write them down.

Read the full story here.

Photo credit: Cliff Chamberlan


Bretz RV Below Post