How do you break the commonly held beliefs about thermals to help you hunt outside the box. Knowledge is the key! #bowhuntingwhitetails #bowhunter #publiclandhunting #mobilehunting
Learn his trails he takes in the hub and if you look hard enough there is likely one spot where you have a advantage and that’s all it takes! It took me a year to find the right tree in 20 acres. Ended up in a tree right beside and creek where the water was flowing faster around a bend. The water pulled my scent straight down no matter the wind. He came from down wind the day he lost his life! It changed my hunting style forever!
so if the thermals consistently dropped would you hunt it on a N softer wind and stay farther south towards the mouth of the drainage, hoping you catch him dropping in to scent check the bottom ? Thanks!
Nope you’d be dead wrong! I was on a very sunny south facing slope and it was still dropping. Rising thermals are very very terrain plus habitat specific and they are not consistent at all. Been running wild fire simulation for rising thermals for a decent part of my life. Rising thermals above canopy are consistent, under canopy not so much.
I went back and watched you in the timber. Spots of sunlight were shining through the canopy openings. You were in the shade from the canopy filming. I guarantee you that when the milkweed drifts through the sunlight shining through the canopy. The milkweed will shoot up because that spot where the sunlight shines into the timber is much warmer than where you were sitting. The milkweed will raise. That sunny spot is warm, the air is lighter. I tested before. Milkweed will dance up and down through the canopy. How far depends on how high your stand is and how open the canopy is. Go back and stand in the sun and float another one. It'll rise. Unless the wind is stronger than the thermal currents. To me. You're only complicating physics.
@@todlew3238 believe me when I say November Warrior knows what he’s talking about. I assure you that he’s been in a fair amount of thermal hubs with his research. I’m not discounting you, but take his experience seriously.
Great, thanks!
My guess is that the humidity level will also influence the thermal direction due to heavier air? What do you think?
Learn his trails he takes in the hub and if you look hard enough there is likely one spot where you have a advantage and that’s all it takes! It took me a year to find the right tree in 20 acres. Ended up in a tree right beside and creek where the water was flowing faster around a bend. The water pulled my scent straight down no matter the wind. He came from down wind the day he lost his life! It changed my hunting style forever!
But wouldn't a high pressure blue bird morning after a front have the thermals rising?
so if the thermals consistently dropped would you hunt it on a N softer wind and stay farther south towards the mouth of the drainage, hoping you catch him dropping in to scent check the bottom ? Thanks!
With the Thermals still dropping with the canopy up. would that change once its was gone?
Betcha the milkweed shot straight up soon as it hit the sunlight.
You were in shade.
Nope you’d be dead wrong! I was on a very sunny south facing slope and it was still dropping. Rising thermals are very very terrain plus habitat specific and they are not consistent at all. Been running wild fire simulation for rising thermals for a decent part of my life. Rising thermals above canopy are consistent, under canopy not so much.
I went back and watched you in the timber. Spots of sunlight were shining through the canopy openings. You were in the shade from the canopy filming.
I guarantee you that when the milkweed drifts through the sunlight shining through the canopy. The milkweed will shoot up because that spot where the sunlight shines into the timber is much warmer than where you were sitting. The milkweed will raise. That sunny spot is warm, the air is lighter.
I tested before. Milkweed will dance up and down through the canopy. How far depends on how high your stand is and how open the canopy is.
Go back and stand in the sun and float another one.
It'll rise. Unless the wind is stronger than the thermal currents.
To me. You're only complicating physics.
So I think your dead wrong 😮
Appreciate your input. Good luck out there!
@@todlew3238 believe me when I say November Warrior knows what he’s talking about. I assure you that he’s been in a fair amount of thermal hubs with his research. I’m not discounting you, but take his experience seriously.