Ok folks.... Here's another topic, for FRIENDLY debate.
Folks here always talk about "playing the wind"...
Some folks won't hunt a stand, if the wind is not "right"...
BUT, What do you do, if there is an inconsistent, gusting, blustery, swirling wind???
We hunt mountain deer. The wind on the mountain, never blows the same direction twice...
You can talk about "thermals" and yes we have them. We also have "cross-mountain" winds.
Weather fronts coming in from the North/South west... Nor-Easters.... etc.
Here's what I've learned about deer and how they react to swirling, inconsistent winds over the last 40 some years.
They ignor them... They can't rely on their nose, to warn them of danger, so they use their eyes & ears.
Don't get me wrong, they CAN smell you!!! They just can't tell WHERE you are... It puts them on alert, but they do not automatically vacate the area. Case in point... A buck is feeding under a big White Oak, heavily dropping acorns. He get's a whiff of human scent... Then it's gone. Does he stop feeding, and leave...??
NO, he would starve to death, if he did that every time he smelled a human.
A big buck is on the trail of a hot doe... He crosses your trail, where you walked into your stand.
Does he stop, and turn around...?? Nope, hopefully he'll catch up to her... LOL
Animals are driven by 2 things... The urge to reproduce, and the will to survive.
Let's talk Turkeys...
Turkeys sense of smell, is very poor, but their hearing is impecible, and their eyes like 10X binoculars.
When it rains in the woods, EVERYTHING moves!! And the only thing you can hear, is rain...
Up here at the new house, I have a 7 acre yard, to sit on the porch, and watch the deer & turkeys.
I have been watching a hen, since the begining of July, when we moved up here.
When I first saw her, she had 5-6 poults. Then 3, then 2... Now, only 1
EVERY time we get a hard Thunderstorm/downpour, she and her poults would come out into the field...
She knows that she cannot see or hear predators in the woods.
She brings her poults out into the field, where she can SEE 360 degrees in every direction, to watch for predators.
Just one old woodchucker's opinion.... Whatcha think...??