The Best Anglers Never Stop Learning

The Best Anglers Never Stop Learning

Nymph, Emerger

WD-40

Insect Species Icon Midges, Blue Wing Olive, PMD and 1 others
Difficulty Icon Easy - 1-3 Min
Water Category Icon Coldwater

Tying Video

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Tying Recipe
  • Hook: Straight eye emerger hook (Dairiki 125 or equivalent)
  • Thread: UTC 70 Denier
  • Tail: Wood Duck Fibers
  • Head: Wood Duck Fibers and Superfine Dubbing
  • Tail: Mallard Fibers or hungarian partridge fibers
  • Head: Mallard Fibers or hungarian partridge fibers and Any Fine Dubbing

It’s a fairly easy tie and because it has only a couple materials, you can do a few variations.  To stay relatively true to the pattern, you can:

  1. Add a flashback head on top of the wing casing
  2. Add krystal flash to the tail
  3. Wrap the body in small wire.
  4. Wrap the body and make segments with white or black thread
  5. Variate in different colors: Red, Brown, Olive, Grey, Tan, Black, Purple etc

All are decent variations and the flashier ones work well on clear days.

The key benefit of this fly is it’s simplicity in how it’s tied and it’s slim profile. We often tie flies that are much bulkier than the real imitations. A WD-40 is an ultra slim fly that really looks like a small baetis/BWO nymph or a midge emerging from it’s shuck. Both are strong food sources in early spring through fall with an importance on early spring and late fall for this pattern. It works year round, but early spring and late fall it really seems to shine.

Using this in a traditional or euro nymph set up is a good option or as a dropper behind a dry fly as mentioned in the video.  Really no way to fish it wrong as it’s so versatile as both a nymph and as an emerger.

I have particularly good luck when I set it up as my point fly (last fly) in my nymph rig and get it deep in the strike zone with heavier flies or split shot.  When there is a heavy fly right above it, that fly bounces along the bottom and the WD-40 floats freely without weight just above the river bottom very naturally.  Make sure to leave ample space (long tippet 18-24 inches) between your heavy fly and your WD-40 so it floats naturally and isn’t just dragged by the heavier fly.  Any longer than 24 inches however, and you’ll probably not detect many strikes so there is a balance to it.

Blue Wing Olive

Regional Hatch Chart Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Region: West
Blue Wing Olive
Sizes: #16 - #24
Region: Northwest
Blue Wing Olive
Sizes: #16 - #24
Region: East
Blue Wing Olive
Sizes: #16 - #24
Region: Southeast
Blue Wing Olive
Sizes: #16 - #24
Region: Midwest
Blue Wing Olive
Sizes: #16 - #24

Midges

Regional Hatch Chart Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Region: West, Northwest, East, Southeast, Midwest
Midges
Sizes: #14 - #26

PMD

Regional Hatch Chart Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Region: West, Northwest, East, Southeast, Midwest
PMD
Sizes: #14 - #20

Trico

Regional Hatch Chart Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Region: West, Northwest
Trico
Sizes: #18 - #26
Region: East, Southeast, Midwest
Trico
Sizes: #18 - #26

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