It wasn’t so long ago that I was at the stage in life where a number of iconic figures in the art and entertainment world had begun to pass out of this life. I am far from being a celebrity hound, but as I scanned the news headlines each morning, it was always a sad and somewhat mildly shocking thing to see that an actor, singer or other icon I’d long admired had been admitted to a hospital for the kinds of illnesses that portend the end, or that indeed the end had come. The mild shock in such moments stems no doubt from the reminder that in fact we are all, all of us, “in the queue.”
More recently, feathered in among these iconic entertainment artists, the mentor-friends of my boyhood have been departing. The deaths that have hit closest have been among the men with whom I had the honor of hunting and fishing, men who I studied closely and learned from. The lessons included the proper handling of firearms, where to look in a pool for trout, various forms of woodcraft and the like, of course, but more importantly my association with these men provided vital guideposts along my own path toward – and into – adulthood.
I doubt that there was anyone who had a greater influence on my young life than did Bill Kodrich. The winter when I was 12, he taught me to tie flies, the very first of which was a white-winged Coachman… I can still remember my clumsy fingers fumbling to tie in matched sections of Mallard wing. That spring at the small pond on his property, Bill let me borrow one of his fly rods as he showed me how to cast a fly line. Later, he brought me into the fold of Trout Unlimited, an organization in which my wife and I are proud to be life-time members. (Bill, who was a biology professor at Clarion State College/University, served as Pennsylvania’s TU President and in 1991 received TU’s Distinguished Service Award.
As important as those early lessons were, it has been Bill’s example that has had the greater impact. Were one to glance at my various tools, fly boxes, cookware and so forth, one might notice every drill bit accounted for and in its proper place, flies arranged in tidy rows, cookware stored thoughtfully, clean and cared for. “This is the way Bill would do it,” I’ve said to Barbra or thought to myself countless times – and will continue to do so, a fly rod wiped clean and returned to its proper place on wall pegs after a day’s fishing bringing back fond memories of Clarion and of hunting and fishing with Bill and studying his example. In fact, I find that as I pass by vegetable gardens here and there, compared with the impeccably well-ordered rows Bill attended to, all are somewhat wanting. And it’s seldom that I have a really good piece of pie and he doesn’t come to mind. “We’ve got to fuel up if we’re going to be spending the day…” hunting or fishing.
The testament of Bill’s life – of the lives of all of these mentors from my youth – is that even a little attention cast to a young person can have an impact that lasts a lifetime. It is a legacy grander and more meaningful than the largest mansion, a pile of money to the sky, or fame in any measure.
JD, Cordova, Alaska


Beautiful tribute to your mentor and dear friend.Those of us who have known men and women who deeply affected our own ways of being are truly blessed.For me the Alaska poet John Haines has this kind of resonance as does Ira Shatzman my beloved english teacher who showed me the world from a classroom in Sheepshead Bay Brooklyn.Lovely memories for sure and for keeps.Hold them close in your heart.
I think also here is the reminder that even small acts – both negative and positive – can have incredibly impactful, lasting effects… and so mindfulness… intention… in everything we do…
YES X1000
That was a beautiful post and tribute.
Somewhat older than you, our group of close connections from previous generation is down to one 98-year-old still going strong. The professors, teachers and early colleagues are all gone, and I watch closely as the CBS Sunday Morning program notes the passing of the icons of our days. Friends closer to our age have serious health issues, and others have already passed. But, as you did above with Bill, we are grateful for the contributions they made to our lives and consider our losses just to be a price we pay for the privilege of continuing on.
Thanks for the thought and perspective. A motto could be gratitude, gratitude, gratitude… and carry on!