Lefty's Deceiver Explained

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Type:Streamer
Creator:Lefty Kreh
Created:1950s
Sizes:8-2/0
Hooktype:TMC 811S stainless saltwater or equivalent
Thread:White 3/0, 6/0 or equivalent
Tail:Four to six white saddle hackles
Body:Silver tinsel
Wing:White bucktail
Topping:Silver krystal flash
Head:White thread
Use1:All species of saltwater and fresh water gamefish
Ref:Book: The History of Fly-Fishing in Fifty Flies . Whitelaw, Ian . Abrams . New York . 9781617691461 . 2015 . 140-143.

The Lefty's Deceiver is an artificial fly streamer pattern used in fly fishing for freshwater and saltwater species. The fly was originated by fly angler and author Lefty Kreh in the Chesapeake Bay for striped bass. The original fly was tied to resemble smelt, a common striped bass forage. The Deceiver is arguably the best known saltwater fly pattern in the world and in 1991 the U.S. Postal Service honored Kreh’s creation with a postage stamp.[1]

Origin

In the late 1950s, striped bass populations in the Chesapeake Bay were healthy and Lefty Kreh pursued them on a regular basis along the lower Eastern shore of the bay. He and his fishing partners faced a rather common issue with the big streamer flies of the time—feathers fouling around the hook. Saddle hackles secured near the eye of the hook, as was the common practice of the time, had a tendency to twist and foul around the hook bend during retrieves.[2] Fouled flies rarely deceived the wily striped bass. Lefty’s goal as he put it was: "I'm going to design a fly that won't foul on the cast! It will have a fish shape, but can be made in many lengths. You can vary the color combinations; it will also swim well but when lifted for the back cast it will be sleek and have little air-resistance."[3] The original Deceiver was all white and mimicked the prolific smelt that the Chesapeake Bay stripers foraged on.

Materials

The original Lefty's Deceiver was tied with white saddle hackles tied in at the bend of a standard, short shank saltwater hook. Four to six hackles were used with tips curved to the outside. Flash was added on top of the hackles. The original body was silver tinsel. A collar of white buck tail was layered at the top, sides and bottom of the front of the hook. The buck tail extended just beyond the hook bend.

Variations and sizes

In the 1960s when Lefty Kreh relocated to South Florida and began pushing the limits of saltwater fly fishing, the Deceiver grew in popularity and in variety. Today, the Deceiver is tied in an almost infinite number of color-material-size combinations. In 2012, Kreh published 101 Fish—A Fly Fisher’s Life List detailing many of his fly fishing exploits around the world. A great majority of those species were caught on variations of the Lefty’s Deceiver.[4] Fly tiers have recreated the pattern in a wide variety of colors and configurations to mimick the various fresh and saltwater forage fish that larger fish feed upon.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Philatelic phlies--Do Postal Services have notions of flyfishing? Do flyfishers have something in common with stamp collectors? . Globalflyfisher.com . Bas Verschoor . November 30, 1998 . December 30, 2016.
  2. Book: The History of Fly-Fishing in Fifty Flies . Whitelaw, Ian . Abrams . New York . 9781617691461 . 2015 . 140-143.
  3. Web site: Lefty’s Deceiver by Lefty Kreh . Blanton, Dan . danblanton.com . August 9, 2006 . December 30, 2016.
  4. Book: 101 Fish: A Fly Fisher's Life List . Kreh, Lefty . Stackpole Headwater . 2012 . 9780811711487 .