Mica caps are wonderful in high frequency applications and are very tolerant to heat and high voltage(if you want to pot with epoxy, and you can't find potting epoxy, this is very helpful). Neither of these is particularly important in the Fix, but they do sound very good. They are also a good cap to use if you want your fix to be dug out of the ground in 2000 years and still be operational. They should work as long as the epoxy case stays in tact, which would be a very, very long time.
The big downside to silver mica caps is that they are pretty expensive. This is masked a little by how small the values are, but paying $3-4 for a 1000pF cap gets a little crazy if you have to buy more than one or two.
Silver mica caps are also available in far more values, which is critical at times when you might be addressing ringing in a push-pull amp by adding a cap across the feedback resistor, and you need a weird value that doesn't exist as a polystyrene.