By Forest B. West, THCFF Member
There’s something magical about sitting at a cluttered fly tying desk, bobbin in hand, thread cutting through the air with soft clicks.
I still remember the first fly I ever tied, a black foam spider, crudely crafted from kitchen sponges I stole from my mother, rubber bands, and sewing thread. I’d cut them into rough shapes with dull old scissors (also borrowed), then color them with a black permanent marker, and clamp the hook in a pair of channel-lock pliers from my dad’s woodshed. It wasn’t pretty, but it worked. That first "kitchen spider" might not have been art, but it was alive in my hands, and it caught fish.
I started fly fishing when I was eight years old, growing up in the Texas Hill Country around Fredericksburg. Back then, the rivers and creeks were my whole world. Catching those first few sunfish on a fly I had cobbled together with scavenged materials lit a fire in me that never burned out. It wasn’t just the thrill of the catch; it was the wonder that something I had made, something so simple and homemade, could fool a living, breathing fish. I was hooked, and I’ve been tying ever since.
In the beginning, everything felt overwhelming. Sizes of hooks, types of feathers, the strange and specific names: marabou, dubbing, chenille. Every tutorial made it look effortless. My early flies looked like they’d been stepped on. They unraveled if you looked at them wrong. But every failure taught me something. Mostly patience. Every crooked tail and over-wrapped body was a small stone laid on the path toward better flies.
The first real success was, of course, that foam spider. I tied a dozen of them in every shade I could mix with permanent markers. They weren’t pretty, but they floated, and they caught fish. And that was enough. I learned quickly that each pattern has its own rhythm; a series of steps that, when practiced enough, becomes a kind of quiet music under your fingers.
Patterns, to me, are more than recipes. They're stories waiting to be told on water.
The Elk Hair Caddis reminds me of summer evenings when the caddis hatches would light up the river like falling stars. Big foam terrestrials like hoppers and beetles call back endless afternoons walking the shady banks of the Pedernales River, flipping flies under overhanging limbs. Even the humble San Juan Worm carries a story: a freezing February day, fingers numb, trout willing despite the odds.
Some flies carry more than memories, they carry legacy. My first rod and reel weren’t bought in any store. I found them tucked away in my grandfather’s barn, a dusty treasure I wasn’t supposed to be snooping through. The old fiberglass rod eventually wore out, but the Pflueger Medalist 1495 reel still spins today, a cherished heirloom and a tie to the man whose name I carry.
The next rod came through a bit of determination, and maybe a little mischief. I rode my bike 4 miles into town, without telling my parents, lawn mowing money burning a hole in my pocket. At a local fly shop, the Country Flyfisher, I bought a TFO Lefty Kreh 6-weight rod, and it’s still one of my favorite tools on the water all these years later.
I’ve come to believe that tying flies isn’t just about imitating bugs or baitfish. It’s about capturing a memory. A hope. A piece of a river, a stretch of ocean, a day with friends. When you sit down to tie, you’re stitching a story with thread and feather. And maybe that’s why the flies that work best are often the ones you tied with care, thinking about a particular bend in a creek, a flash of golden fins, a swirl of water around your boots.
If you’re just starting out, here’s what I’ll tell you:
Don’t rush. Accept that the first dozen flies will be ugly. Embrace the clumsy wraps and misplaced wings. Every thread wrap, even the messy ones, is a stitch in a larger tapestry. Watch how a fly evolves in your hands after a hundred tries. It’s one of the quietest, most satisfying things you’ll ever experience.
And if you’re an old hand at the vise, maybe it’s time to pass it on. Share your stories. Teach someone how to tie a foam spider with a kitchen sponge. Hand down a reel or a few battered flies. Because at the end of the day, tying flies isn’t a race. It’s a community, connected by thread and story, patience and hope.
So tonight, when you sit down at your vise, pick a pattern you haven’t tied in a while. Pour a drink. Turn on some music. And tie not just a fly, but a memory.
Because someday, when that battered bug sails across a stream and disappears in a split second splash, you’ll know: every imperfect wrap, every late night at the desk, every tangled mess was worth it.