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<blockquote data-quote="BSK" data-source="post: 5784760" data-attributes="member: 17"><p>As with any single influence, there is more going on than just that single influence. The rut, wind, pressure changes, precipitation, etc. But looking at hunter observations on a single property over 35 years, temperature plays a role. The below graph is hunter collected buck sighting rates for morning hunts in November, analyzed degree by degree and with the statistical trend. The data makes it clear that good hunts can occur in warm weather and bad hunts can occur in colder weather, but the statistical trend (black line) shows that on average hunters see bucks twice as often when morning lows are cold versus morning lows that are very warm.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BSK, post: 5784760, member: 17"] As with any single influence, there is more going on than just that single influence. The rut, wind, pressure changes, precipitation, etc. But looking at hunter observations on a single property over 35 years, temperature plays a role. The below graph is hunter collected buck sighting rates for morning hunts in November, analyzed degree by degree and with the statistical trend. The data makes it clear that good hunts can occur in warm weather and bad hunts can occur in colder weather, but the statistical trend (black line) shows that on average hunters see bucks twice as often when morning lows are cold versus morning lows that are very warm. [/QUOTE]
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