Fly Fishing Saves Lives

Dana Lattery

Storytelling has earned its place as the most important tradition humans possess. The most important reason for this being that every story contains a lesson. The lesson to love, to forgive, to be just, and to strive for better than we have. They empower us, they lead us, they comfort us. This podcast is all about the stories of fly fishermen across the globe, who all have one common bond, Fly Fishing Saved their lives.

Episodes

  1. Ted Diedrich

    2D AGO

    Ted Diedrich

    Ted's story begins in Trail — steel town grit, river valley air, small-town backbone. Raised in the Kootenays, Ted carried that work ethic west to Vancouver, graduating from UBC, and deciding school wasn't for him, he worked as a doorman and later as an arborist. Hard jobs. Outside jobs. Jobs that keep a man moving. He found the love of his life in his late 30s. That’s important. Some men rush it. Ted didn’t. When he found her, he went all in. And then came the dogs. Not casual pet ownership. Obsession. Bird dogs. Trialing dogs. Training days that turned into full seasons. Upland fields, early frost, heart pounding at the flush. Life was busy. Full. Loud in the best way. Somewhere in there, fly fishing grabbed him. And when it did, it didn’t let go. Ted started spending every spare minute around the lakes near Kamloops — stillwater country. Long casts. Chironomids. Watching the wind ripple across glassy mornings. The best advice he ever received? “If you can’t cast further, move your boat.” Simple. Tactical. But also philosophical. When the distance won’t close — adjust your position. The Move That Changed EverythingAfter retirement, Ted and his wife moved to Alberta to be closer to their daughter. A hopeful move. A family move. Shortly after arriving, his wife was diagnosed with terminal pancreatic cancer. Life stopped. For four years, Ted drove her to chemo. Sat in hospital rooms. Lived in waiting areas. The river disappeared. The dogs went quiet. The boat stayed parked. Everything paused. After she passed, the house felt different. The days stretched longer. And then something shifted. Ted found a group of men. Found community again. And he found the river. Standing in current on the Bow River, something came back online. Not instantly. Not dramatically. But steadily. The Bow gave him rhythm again. Walking local streams gave him breath again. Fly fishing didn’t erase grief. It gave it somewhere to go. What Ted Believes NowAt 74, Ted doesn’t sugarcoat it. Life is not guaranteed. His advice is direct: “Don’t wait. If you can retire — retire. Go live your life.” Not reckless. Not impulsive. Intentional. Move the boat. If something isn’t working — change position. Change perspective. Change seasons. But don’t sit still waiting for perfect conditions. Because perfect conditions don’t exist. This episode isn’t about tragedy. It’s about a man who loved deeply. Worked hard. Lost greatly. And walked back into the river anyway. And that’s the kind of story that matters.

    1h 56m
  2. Tim Hepworth

    12/18/2025

    Tim Hepworth

    Tim Hepworth is a fly fishing guide, fly tier, dad, and former Primary Care Paramedic who brings heart, skill, and real-world grit to everything he does. Born and raised in central Alberta, Tim grew up in a family where the outdoors wasn’t a weekend hobby—it was life. As the youngest of nine kids, he learned resilience, adaptability, and how to find joy in chaos long before he ever tied a fly or rowed a boat. FLY FISHING BOW RIVER OUTFITTERS After working in CrossFit coaching and then making the leap into EMS, Tim found himself drawn deeply to the rhythms of nature—the quiet flow of rivers, the meditative cast, and the unexpected lessons that happen when you’re rooted in a riverbed rather than an emergency scene. The birth of his daughter, Wren, marked a turning point: instead of shelving his outdoor life, he expanded it, bringing her along on the water and weaving parenthood into his connection to the sport. FLY FISHING BOW RIVER OUTFITTERS+1 Today, Tim is widely known for more than his guiding expertise on the Bow River. He’s a co-host of Thursday Night Live Fly Tying, where his creativity at the vise and genuine personality have made him a respected voice in the fly tying community. Whether he’s sharing a tying technique, rowing a drift boat, or helping someone experience their first trout, Tim’s approach is always infused with warmth, humor, and a deep respect for the outdoors. FLY FISHING BOW RIVER OUTFITTERS Outside of guiding and tying, his favorite fishing partner is his daughter, Wren—proof that fly fishing isn’t just a career or hobby for Tim, but a lifelong way of being, teaching, and connecting. FLY FISHING BOW RIVER OUTFITTERS “If you’re on the water, there’s no such thing as a bad day.” — Tim Hepworth FLY FISHING BOW RIVER OUTFITTERS

    1h 6m
5
out of 5
8 Ratings

About

Storytelling has earned its place as the most important tradition humans possess. The most important reason for this being that every story contains a lesson. The lesson to love, to forgive, to be just, and to strive for better than we have. They empower us, they lead us, they comfort us. This podcast is all about the stories of fly fishermen across the globe, who all have one common bond, Fly Fishing Saved their lives.