Fountains of Youth – Classic trout flies that have withstood the test of time … flies that remain “forever young”
by Rusty Dunn
Groundhog Day is an important landmark for most anglers, as February 2nd is midway between the winter solstice and the vernal equinox. Winter is fading fast, and spring is on the mind, if not yet in the air. Punxsutawney Phil emerges from his burrow, looks for his shadow, and thereby forecasts the severity of winter’s retreat. Hope springs eternal on Groundhog Day.
Groundhog Day for angling author Eric Leiser was the fateful day when he dispatched a groundhog while speeding along New York Route 30 near Pepacton Reservoir in the Catskills. The good fortune of that encounter, followed by swift application of a skinning knife, produced the key ingredient of what later became Leiser’s signature fly patterns. Groundhogs, known also as woodchucks and whistle-pigs, are ground-dwelling marmots whose fur is an excellent but underappreciated material for fly tying. Leiser admired his handsome roadkill and, in time, grew to appreciate woodchuck fur for its texture, floatation, strength, and versatility in fly tying.
Leiser aspired as a young man to be a musician and songwriter, but his first royalty check for a recorded composition amounted to $13.41. A second royalty statement reported “No Sales”. Leiser then realized that a career in music was unlikely. Instead, he pursued his lifelong interests in fishing, hunting, and the outdoors. Those pursuits eventually established Leiser as one of the most influential fly tying materials experts of the 20th century. He opened Fireside Angler in Melville, NY in the 1960s as a mail-order source of quality fly tying materials. Only a dozen or so such mail-order suppliers existed at the time, and Fireside Angler quickly became one of the most influential. Leiser supplied tying materials to most of the mid-century giants of American fly fishing.
Leiser was a self-taught angler who learned his skills standing in a river and sitting at the tying bench. He published between 1973 and 1987 six fly tying books that are thoroughly excellent but, with one exception, not widely discussed today. They are rich in detailed, first-hand knowledge about the methods and materials of successful angling. If you need information on how to hunt, kill, skin, clean, tan, prepare, and store wild or domesticated animals for fly tying, Leiser’s 1973 book Fly Tying Materials is all you need. His second book, The Complete Book of Fly Tying (1977) is his most influential. It instructed decades of beginning fly tyers on the craft and, remarkably, is still in print today. Leiser’s third book, The Caddis and the Angler (1977, coauthored with Larry Soloman), was the very first to describe caddisfly life cycles and behaviors in detail and to provide fly patterns that imitate each stage. Fly anglers were slow to fully appreciate the importance of caddisflies to trout, but Leiser & Soloman remedied the oversight. For these and other accomplishments, Leiser was elected in 2002 to the Hall of Fame of the Catskill Fly Fishing Center and Museum.
The Woodchuck Caddis, known better as the Chuck Caddis, is one of Eric Leiser’s favorite flies, in part because it features a wing of woodchuck guard hairs. Such hairs are stiff without being rigid, float well, and are beautifully barred (black-tan-black-white) along their length. The Chuck Caddis incorporates features of many successful caddis imitations: a short body, a down-wing silhouette of long fibers folded over the body, and fur dubbing fibers in constant motion atop the surface. It consistently brings up fish during the entire season and in all parts of the country.
Leiser refused to take credit for design of the Chuck Caddis, because he knew of an unpublished earlier imitation named Eddy’s Fly. ‘Eddy’ has never been identified, but Leiser replaced Eddy’s body of orange monocord with fur dubbing chosen to match the color of prevailing naturals. The resulting fly is simple, durable, and very effective. Stock your fly box with Chuck Caddis in various sizes and colors, and you can relive Groundhog Day over and over again, every single day of the trout season.
Copyright 2022, Rusty Dunn
Chuck Caddis
A dirty orange Chuck Caddis is Leiser’s favorite. For a caddis skater imitation, use oversized hackle. The entire fly should ride above the water, supported only by the hackle and wing tips. Such skaters can draw explosive rises during periods of caddis egg-laying.
Hook: |
Dry fly, #12 – #18 |
Thread: |
Fine gray, or a color to match the body |
Body: |
Gray, brown-olive, dirty orange, black, or tan/yellow fur dubbing; color chosen to match the naturals |
Wing: |
Woodchuck guard hairs |
Hackle: |
Rooster, brown and grizzly mixed |
Chuck Caddis
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Last Updated: July 6, 2022 by Drew Kasel
by Rusty Dunn
Groundhog Day is an important landmark for most anglers, as February 2nd is midway between the winter solstice and the vernal equinox. Winter is fading fast, and spring is on the mind, if not yet in the air. Punxsutawney Phil emerges from his burrow, looks for his shadow, and thereby forecasts the severity of winter’s retreat. Hope springs eternal on Groundhog Day.
Groundhog Day for angling author Eric Leiser was the fateful day when he dispatched a groundhog while speeding along New York Route 30 near Pepacton Reservoir in the Catskills. The good fortune of that encounter, followed by swift application of a skinning knife, produced the key ingredient of what later became Leiser’s signature fly patterns. Groundhogs, known also as woodchucks and whistle-pigs, are ground-dwelling marmots whose fur is an excellent but underappreciated material for fly tying. Leiser admired his handsome roadkill and, in time, grew to appreciate woodchuck fur for its texture, floatation, strength, and versatility in fly tying.
Leiser aspired as a young man to be a musician and songwriter, but his first royalty check for a recorded composition amounted to $13.41. A second royalty statement reported “No Sales”. Leiser then realized that a career in music was unlikely. Instead, he pursued his lifelong interests in fishing, hunting, and the outdoors. Those pursuits eventually established Leiser as one of the most influential fly tying materials experts of the 20th century. He opened Fireside Angler in Melville, NY in the 1960s as a mail-order source of quality fly tying materials. Only a dozen or so such mail-order suppliers existed at the time, and Fireside Angler quickly became one of the most influential. Leiser supplied tying materials to most of the mid-century giants of American fly fishing.
Leiser was a self-taught angler who learned his skills standing in a river and sitting at the tying bench. He published between 1973 and 1987 six fly tying books that are thoroughly excellent but, with one exception, not widely discussed today. They are rich in detailed, first-hand knowledge about the methods and materials of successful angling. If you need information on how to hunt, kill, skin, clean, tan, prepare, and store wild or domesticated animals for fly tying, Leiser’s 1973 book Fly Tying Materials is all you need. His second book, The Complete Book of Fly Tying (1977) is his most influential. It instructed decades of beginning fly tyers on the craft and, remarkably, is still in print today. Leiser’s third book, The Caddis and the Angler (1977, coauthored with Larry Soloman), was the very first to describe caddisfly life cycles and behaviors in detail and to provide fly patterns that imitate each stage. Fly anglers were slow to fully appreciate the importance of caddisflies to trout, but Leiser & Soloman remedied the oversight. For these and other accomplishments, Leiser was elected in 2002 to the Hall of Fame of the Catskill Fly Fishing Center and Museum.
The Woodchuck Caddis, known better as the Chuck Caddis, is one of Eric Leiser’s favorite flies, in part because it features a wing of woodchuck guard hairs. Such hairs are stiff without being rigid, float well, and are beautifully barred (black-tan-black-white) along their length. The Chuck Caddis incorporates features of many successful caddis imitations: a short body, a down-wing silhouette of long fibers folded over the body, and fur dubbing fibers in constant motion atop the surface. It consistently brings up fish during the entire season and in all parts of the country.
Leiser refused to take credit for design of the Chuck Caddis, because he knew of an unpublished earlier imitation named Eddy’s Fly. ‘Eddy’ has never been identified, but Leiser replaced Eddy’s body of orange monocord with fur dubbing chosen to match the color of prevailing naturals. The resulting fly is simple, durable, and very effective. Stock your fly box with Chuck Caddis in various sizes and colors, and you can relive Groundhog Day over and over again, every single day of the trout season.
Copyright 2022, Rusty Dunn
Chuck Caddis
A dirty orange Chuck Caddis is Leiser’s favorite. For a caddis skater imitation, use oversized hackle. The entire fly should ride above the water, supported only by the hackle and wing tips. Such skaters can draw explosive rises during periods of caddis egg-laying.
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Category: Fly Tying, Rusty Dunn Fountains of Youth
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