What is your experience with how quickly evening thermals reach the ground in a light breeze? I hunt the Blue Ridge mountains and if you were hunting the last two days of the NC's northwest season, you know that it was a bit breezing with a cold front coming in Thursday. I had one of the biggest does I've ever seen coming in for what should have been a good shot opportunity. I will confess that I don't consider the wind where I hunt like I would elsewhere. In the "hills and hollers" it swirls and eddies constantly. If I hunted the wind religiously, I'd be moving all the time and in circles most of it! Many times, even on breezy days it will settle at sunset, but not with the barometer changing. As best I could tell the wind was coming out of the S-SE along my ridge. I got lucky and spotted the deer's legs moving under the laurel at 60-70 yds. away, long before I heard it. It struck me that in the many years I've hunted this particular stand, I'd never had a deer come in this exact route. It was a side-hill, below me and quite steep. I also realized about the same time on this day it was mostly down-wind. I thought the breeze would carry my scent over her but she stopped angling towards me at 25 yds. with her head behind a tree, allowing me to get ready for the shot. She stood for maybe 30 seconds and bounded back the way she had come, not "unglued" but clearly on alert. Then she paused where I had first seen her and within a minute confirmed her impressions, blew and left Dodge. My stand is about 15-18 feet up. I know she never saw me. The only thing I can think of is that the evening thermals busted me, but I would have thought with a breeze they wouldn't have made it to the ground that quickly! What do you think?