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  2. Loch Ordie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loch_Ordie

    No mention of Loch Ordie would be complete without the legendary trout fly named after the loch. A simple and unusual design, just hackles. Loch Ordie gives its name to one of the Scotland most useful and famous trout flies, Loch Ordie. [3] The fly is either fished as a dapping fly or on the bob of a three wet fly cash. [3]

  3. G. E. M. Skues - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G._E._M._Skues

    His achievement was the invention of fly fishing with the nymph, a discovery that put a full stop to half a century of stagnation in wet fly fishing for trout, and formed the bedrock for modern sunk fly fishing. Skues' achievement was not without controversy, and provoked what was perhaps the most bitter dispute in fly fishing history.

  4. Alexandra (wet fly) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandra_(wet_fly)

    The Alexandra wet fly originated as the Lady of the Lake in the 1860s by an unknown angler, primarily for trout in lakes. The fly gained popularity because it was extremely effective when fished slowly on sinking lines. Anglers began using the fly in rivers for sea trout and Atlantic salmon with success. It was so effective, that it was ...

  5. River Spey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_Spey

    The river is known by anglers for the quality of its salmon and trout fishing, including a particular form of fly fishing where the angler uses a double-handed fly rod to throw a 'Spey cast' whereby the fly and the line do not travel behind the fisher (thereby keeping these away from the bushes and trees lining the banks behind him or her ...

  6. Loch Watten - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loch_Watten

    Loch Watten is a loch in the River Wick drainage basin in Caithness, Scotland. [1] The name is a tautology, consisting of the word "loch" (of Gaelic origin) and vatn, a Norse word meaning the very same, found in such names as "Þingvallavatn" and Myvatn in Iceland, and "Røssvatnet" and "Møsvatn" in Norway.

  7. Arthur Oglesby - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Oglesby

    He continued to run the fishing school at Grantown-on-Spey in Scotland during the spring weeks and late summer each year, teaching hundreds of people to perfect the art of salmon fishing. In December 2000, at the age of 76, Oglesby died suddenly, from an undiagnosed infection, after heart surgery a few months earlier.

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