George McLeod first the Skykomish Sunrise for his father Ken. It is a West Coast classic and an example of fly design as art.
Ken's account was included by Trey Coombs in his book Steelhead Fly Fishing. Ken and his son, George, were driving east to the Skykomish River early one January morning in 1936. The sun was coming up over the snow capped Cascades, a splendor of red, yellow, and white.
Tie me a fly with those colors in it, Ken told his son.
That night George tied the Skykomish Sunrise and the next week he caught 3 steelhead including a 17 pounder in a pool of the Skykomish near Monroe Washington." As Ken told Coombs, 'The Fly became as sensation'.
It is also now used for sea trout in Europe and has proven itself a useful cutthroat & coho fly.
as tied:
hook: #6 black salmon hook
Tag: #14 silver mylar tinsel
Tail: mixed red and yellow hackle fibers
Body Senyo's red dubbing mix
Hackle: red and yellow hackle
Wing: white arctic fox and pearl krystal flash