This was the best instructional fly video I’ve ever had the pleasure of watching! Such awesome transferable insights. Loved the steaming trick! You the man, Chuck 👊🏻👍🏻
Very nice variant. I’m not sure when, “Goddard,” got attached to this. I’m mid 60’s and when I was a very young ladd it was taught to me by an old tyer in his 70’s. It was then called a Muddler Head. Done dark brown in 14-16 it was a go to for little black caddis. Thanks for the lesson, Charlie!
Thank you Charlie. Excellent video. Enjoyed the pro tips. I will try that steaming trick. Learned something new today! Now if I can only get through the day without bleeding...
i know im asking the wrong place but does someone know a way to log back into an instagram account..? I was dumb forgot the login password. I would appreciate any tips you can offer me
@Pedro Korbin i really appreciate your reply. I found the site through google and I'm in the hacking process atm. Seems to take a while so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
I just found a very interesting few paragraphs about the Goddard Caddis on a site called The English fly shop. Apparently Goddard wound a dubbing body and faired the deer hair just on top of the hook. The Goddard Caddis in all black is a photo on the site. But I like Your take on not tying the antennas. I tied a few up that look terrible....but know they will catch trout but not picky bluegills.
I just recently started learning to tie and have been very reluctant to try deer hair flies but this video really gives me the incentive to try. Mega Thx for all your video postings!!!
I never tie them with the antenna either, I found that the tippet would twist while fishing. Now I like the addition of dubbing. I don't think the fish care that much, anything to make the fly look better proportionally and more durable I am for. My go-to size is a #14 and #16, I tie # 12 for the purpose of hanging a nymph off the back end.
Hey George, how's it going? Like you I tie some of these in "extra large" sizes - but I will go up to #6 and around 1 1/4 inches long for a buoyant "hopper-dropper" rig. I also use the large sizes mid summer - I often see a light colored moth running on the surface in the evening and the smallmouth bass go absolutely nuts chasing them.
@@hankvana2149 Well I am fine, I been tying flies every day with what I have. Can't go to the local ( for me a 60 -mile drive) fly shop. Other than needing a set of waders, it's ok, been downright cold for April and a lot of rain, more to come, this weekend.
Opps! I must have confused articles on the Goddard Caddis. It was Fly Fishing the Sierra website that had a cool photo of an all black Goddard Caddis. The English Fly Fishing Shop still has great historical info on the Goddard Caddis.
That's the way I have always tied mine, the only difference is that I use a stimulator hook. Funnily enough, ones tied with fluoro green dubbing outfished ones tied with hot orange dubbing by a considerable margin.
Simon peaked my curiosity, so I went back through my pre-60's reference books because something was niggling at my memory about yarn tied down before spinning and then bringing that yarn back under the body after hair trimming. I didn't find it, but Leonard and Leiser, et al, show just what we see here by Charlie. Simon, I'd be interested to know what the original called for. Regardless, this is damned sure close enough for government work! Nice tie, Charlie.
Alright, I finally found a reference showing the underbody. Mike Dawes The Flytier's Manual 1985. Dawes is an English tyer, so that might make sense. Green or yellow wool or seal's fur (of course - the ubiquitous seal's fur). I remember it being a pain in the butt to tye it this way. Like I said, good enough for government work, Charlie.
Would buying a cheap "pelt" be a fair way to buy bulk or would it be a waste. I'm still really new to all of this and I'm not exactly sure. I just don't want to waste $65-100 of that's all it will be is just a waste
@@CharliesFlyBox lol not just for this piece but just hair practice in general but thank you I greatly appreciate the advice my good man. There's a place kinda close to me does deer butchering and I was debating on stopping by to see if they had anything they would be willing to part with. Again thank you for the advice
This was the best instructional fly video I’ve ever had the pleasure of watching! Such awesome transferable insights. Loved the steaming trick! You the man, Chuck 👊🏻👍🏻
If ever there was a Master Class in fly tying then I've just witnessed it. That was bloody wonderful. Thank you.
Great demo, thanks. I've tied this for several years, but I couldn't get it as neat as I wanted. Your video and practice helped.
Very nice variant. I’m not sure when, “Goddard,” got attached to this. I’m mid 60’s and when I was a very young ladd it was taught to me by an old tyer in his 70’s. It was then called a Muddler Head. Done dark brown in 14-16 it was a go to for little black caddis. Thanks for the lesson, Charlie!
Nice thank you for that steam tip 😯 ohh yeah
Very nice deer hair fly. Thx
Excellent, great tip with steaming the hair
Thanks charle now igot it
Great video!!! thanks for all the tips and tricks!! will give it a go the next days!!! super neat!!!!
Good show. You working in a machine shop today?
Thank you Charlie. Excellent video. Enjoyed the pro tips. I will try that steaming trick. Learned something new today! Now if I can only get through the day without bleeding...
i know im asking the wrong place but does someone know a way to log back into an instagram account..?
I was dumb forgot the login password. I would appreciate any tips you can offer me
@Conrad Ezequiel instablaster =)
@Pedro Korbin i really appreciate your reply. I found the site through google and I'm in the hacking process atm.
Seems to take a while so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
@Pedro Korbin it did the trick and I actually got access to my account again. I'm so happy!
Thanks so much you saved my account!
@Conrad Ezequiel Glad I could help :)
I just found a very interesting few paragraphs about the Goddard Caddis on a site called The English fly shop. Apparently Goddard wound a dubbing body and faired the deer hair just on top of the hook. The Goddard Caddis in all black is a photo on the site. But I like Your take on not tying the antennas. I tied a few up that look terrible....but know they will catch trout but not picky bluegills.
I just recently started learning to tie and have been very reluctant to try deer hair flies but this video really gives me the incentive to try. Mega Thx for all your video postings!!!
I never tie them with the antenna either, I found that the tippet would twist while fishing. Now I like the addition of dubbing. I don't think the fish care that much, anything to make the fly look better proportionally and more durable I am for. My go-to size is a #14 and #16, I tie # 12 for the purpose of hanging a nymph off the back end.
Hey George, how's it going? Like you I tie some of these in "extra large" sizes - but I will go up to #6 and around 1 1/4 inches long for a buoyant "hopper-dropper" rig. I also use the large sizes mid summer - I often see a light colored moth running on the surface in the evening and the smallmouth bass go absolutely nuts chasing them.
@@hankvana2149 Well I am fine, I been tying flies every day with what I have. Can't go to the local ( for me a 60 -mile drive) fly shop. Other than needing a set of waders, it's ok, been downright cold for April and a lot of rain, more to come, this weekend.
Same here.... They seemed to just get in the way so I cut them off.
Chuck: you can’t spin it, the bend is in the way. Tommy Lynch: Hold my beer.
Opps! I must have confused articles on the Goddard Caddis. It was Fly Fishing the Sierra website that had a cool photo of an all black Goddard Caddis. The English Fly Fishing Shop still has great historical info on the Goddard Caddis.
That's the way I have always tied mine, the only difference is that I use a stimulator hook. Funnily enough, ones tied with fluoro green dubbing outfished ones tied with hot orange dubbing by a considerable margin.
Simon peaked my curiosity, so I went back through my pre-60's reference books because something was niggling at my memory about yarn tied down before spinning and then bringing that yarn back under the body after hair trimming. I didn't find it, but Leonard and Leiser, et al, show just what we see here by Charlie. Simon, I'd be interested to know what the original called for. Regardless, this is damned sure close enough for government work! Nice tie, Charlie.
Alright, I finally found a reference showing the underbody. Mike Dawes The Flytier's Manual 1985. Dawes is an English tyer, so that might make sense. Green or yellow wool or seal's fur (of course - the ubiquitous seal's fur). I remember it being a pain in the butt to tye it this way. Like I said, good enough for government work, Charlie.
Considering you mentioned it a few times in this video... How about a big-ass deer hair bass popper video?
What head cement do you use on your Goddard?
Thanks for video, very nice fly. Just wondering - any thoughts about using peacock herl instead of the peacock dubbing?
Roughly for how long do you steam the deer hair?
Charlie, excellent video, thanks for making and sharing. Same question, approx. how long do you steam the hair?
Mark Beauharnois twenty seconds or so? Probably less...it doesn’t take long.
Would buying a cheap "pelt" be a fair way to buy bulk or would it be a waste. I'm still really new to all of this and I'm not exactly sure. I just don't want to waste $65-100 of that's all it will be is just a waste
I’d advise just getting a large piece of deer hair rather than a whole hide. A 4x8 piece of deer will tie more Goddards than you’d ever want.
@@CharliesFlyBox lol not just for this piece but just hair practice in general but thank you I greatly appreciate the advice my good man. There's a place kinda close to me does deer butchering and I was debating on stopping by to see if they had anything they would be willing to part with. Again thank you for the advice
Charlie, have you ever considered putting super glue on the hook or wax the GSP thread w' beeswax to have a firm foundation?
fly request. troll-haired mystery bug
Where do you find troll hair?!
Nothing like John Goddard and Cliff Henry's original so it should have a name change.