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Móa is a fly that is very simple to tie, a great fly from the private collection. It was tied for female anglers with a fondness for champagne called Sparkling Moet. The champagne color is used in the body and wing of the fly, with a sparkling root beer color. Then there is white calf hair, black squirrel, and hen hackle in a circular wrap. The fly Moa is one of several flies in a group called 'simple flies' and works well
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The fly Móri is from a private collection, the fly is simple in design but fishes extremely well. It was created around the same time as Hrappurinn, Móa, and Kobbi. Móri is dark in appearance with a black hen hackle, a black glitter body, red-brown squirrel, glitter in the wings, and black hen. An earth-toned fly that definitely has some relatives in the fly world.
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Móri Tungsten Cone.
The fly Móri is from a private collection and is among the flies that are simple in design but fish extremely well. It was created around the same time as Hrappurinn, Móa, and Kobbi. Móri is dark in appearance with a black hen hackle, a black glitter body, red-brown squirrel, glitter in the wings, and black hen. A earth-toned fly that definitely has some relatives in the fly world. -
Nobbi is likely one of the best streamers we use when targeting brown trout, with a slight weight added to the body. I've used it extensively, and it has often yielded fantastic catches. But why tie it on when the original version is already so effective? The answer is simple: just because! Available in one size.
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This is a fly I use a lot for sea trout; as people know, purple is not commonly used in fly fishing. This fly is incredibly effective, tied on a strong, short, weighted SE hook with a purple hackle in the tail along with silver flash. The body is purple chenille with a holo wing, wrapped with a white hackle and a black head. Stjáni always surprises.
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Valbeinn limited edition
Valbeinn is very popular by Icelandic fly fishermen and growing number of admirers world wide. The Valbeinn fishing fly is a Bismó tybe and is proved very successful in Icelandic rivers like Hítará, Vatndalsá and Hofsá. The fly can also be seen in fishing logs for rivers in Scotland and Argentina.