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Origin and History

The Silver Invicta is a traditional loch-style wet fly that originated in Scotland during the late 19th century. It was designed to imitate small fry, pin-fry, and drowned sedges, but it is equally effective as a general attractor. Known for its silver body and contrasting wing, the Silver Invicta remains a firm favourite for loch and reservoir fishing, particularly when trout are feeding high in the water during summer evenings.

Materials

  • Hook: Wet fly hook, sizes 8–12
  • Thread: Black 6/0
  • Tail: Golden pheasant crest fibres
  • Body: Flat silver tinsel or silver mylar
  • Rib: Fine oval gold tinsel
  • Hackle: Furnace or red game cock hackle (palmered)
  • Throat: Teal or guinea fowl fibres
  • Wing: Mallard flank or grey duck quill fibres

Popular Variations

  • Golden Invicta – uses a gold body instead of silver
  • Claret Invicta – body dubbed with claret seal’s fur
  • Invicta Muddler – with a muddler head for extra wake
  • Mini Silver Invicta – tied small for fry-feeding trout
  • Beadhead Invicta – adds weight for deeper presentation

Step-by-Step Tying Guide

  1. Attach black thread at the hook bend and tie in a few golden pheasant crest fibres for the tail.
  2. Tie in flat silver tinsel for the body and fine oval gold tinsel for ribbing.
  3. Palmer a furnace or red game cock hackle along the body while wrapping the silver tinsel forward to the eye.
  4. Counter-wrap the gold ribbing through the body to reinforce the hackle and add segmentation.
  5. Tie in a throat hackle of teal or guinea fowl fibres swept back beneath the body.
  6. Add a wing of mallard flank or matched grey duck quills, set flat and neat.
  7. Build a small black thread head, whip finish, and varnish.

Seasonality & Representation

The Silver Invicta is most effective from late spring through autumn, especially on stillwaters and lochs when trout are chasing fry or sedge pupae. It is deadly in a loch-style drift on the top dropper, where its silhouette and silver body catch attention in the surface film.

Tackle and Setup

  • Rod: 10ft, 6–7wt for loch-style drifting
  • Line: Floating, midge tip, or slow intermediate
  • Leader: 12–18ft, 8–10lb fluorocarbon
  • Setup: Best fished as a top dropper in a team of three flies, pulled across the waves

Summary Table

Aspect Details
Origin Scotland, late 19th century
Best Seasons Late spring to autumn
Represents Pin-fry, sedge pupae, general attractor
Hook Sizes 8–12
Tackle Setup 10ft rod, floating/midge tip line, 12–18ft leader, fished loch-style