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Wind Speed and Deer Activity
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<blockquote data-quote="Ski" data-source="post: 5197676" data-attributes="member: 20583"><p>A deer, especially older bucks, utilize the wind. They smell 800x better than we can. Their sense of smell is no exaggeration probably sharper than our vision. It's that acute. When a deer puts his nose in the air, it's akin to us squinting our eyes to focus. When he puts himself in position to check the wind, it's like us turning on the lights when we walk into a room. Their nose matters to them like our eyes matter to us. </p><p></p><p>With that in mind, wind direction helps me decide where to hunt, not whether to hunt or not. A buck has his nose. That's what God gave him. I have my brain. That's what God gave me. My brain has to compete with his nose, and the wind is how I do it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ski, post: 5197676, member: 20583"] A deer, especially older bucks, utilize the wind. They smell 800x better than we can. Their sense of smell is no exaggeration probably sharper than our vision. It's that acute. When a deer puts his nose in the air, it's akin to us squinting our eyes to focus. When he puts himself in position to check the wind, it's like us turning on the lights when we walk into a room. Their nose matters to them like our eyes matter to us. With that in mind, wind direction helps me decide where to hunt, not whether to hunt or not. A buck has his nose. That's what God gave him. I have my brain. That's what God gave me. My brain has to compete with his nose, and the wind is how I do it. [/QUOTE]
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