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Deer vision article
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<blockquote data-quote="RockMcL" data-source="post: 5459635" data-attributes="member: 23050"><p>I have found that I can get away with a little more motion at twilight, as long as slow of course. I get that they have an advantage on us but too many times for coincidence I have been able to move to shooting position when they would have caught me 30 minutes earlier. </p><p></p><p>I know there is a major color change the last hour of visible light because I have to take off my glasses which have a coating that screws up my vision at those times. I think at dusk there is a frequency change toward red fairly often which may be a brief disadvantage to them.</p><p></p><p>I almost exclusively hunt in terrain/hills so MY shooting hours end before the legal end since trees/terrain are blocking the suns last rays. Once I see/feel that light shift, I no longer wait for eyes to go behind tree/bush, just slowly move.</p><p></p><p>Anyone else noticed this.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RockMcL, post: 5459635, member: 23050"] I have found that I can get away with a little more motion at twilight, as long as slow of course. I get that they have an advantage on us but too many times for coincidence I have been able to move to shooting position when they would have caught me 30 minutes earlier. I know there is a major color change the last hour of visible light because I have to take off my glasses which have a coating that screws up my vision at those times. I think at dusk there is a frequency change toward red fairly often which may be a brief disadvantage to them. I almost exclusively hunt in terrain/hills so MY shooting hours end before the legal end since trees/terrain are blocking the suns last rays. Once I see/feel that light shift, I no longer wait for eyes to go behind tree/bush, just slowly move. Anyone else noticed this. [/QUOTE]
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