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Started by LaLongbeard, June 17, 2020, 10:56:20 AM
Quote from: Jester87 on June 17, 2020, 08:56:02 PMCool experiment. A few years ago I started suffering from migraines during severe barometric changes. Its jokingly referred to as "my super power" accurately predicting the weather, but it gets miserable unless I take meds. I saw quite a bit of research supporting pressure changes affecting fish, animal (and now my) behavior too. I never thought to correlate it to gobbling!
Quote from: GobbleNut on June 18, 2020, 08:44:11 AMAs others have stated, I have always heard that barometric pressure plays a role in wildlife activity. Unfortunately, I think few of us have the luxury of being able to plan our hunting trips around that. It is good to know that, if I could choose when I get to go, I should take the barometric pressure into consideration. I anticipate that will happen exactly zero times in my hunting future.In summary, that is great information to catalogue for "academic" purposes, but in actual application for me, personally,...not so much. ...Actually, I am just jealous of those guys that get to hunt so much that they can plan their hunting activities on the spur of the moment around things like barometric pressure change. ...Must be nice. Come to think of it, though, I am planning some out-of-state trips for next spring. I think I will take a look later today at what the barometric pressure will be when I am looking at dates for those trips....
Quote from: ChesterCopperpot on June 18, 2020, 12:45:30 PMI think the science has been pretty clear that there's a direct correlation. I wondered this year whether that directly affected the entire season where I live. Birds gobbled very little all year and looking back we had high winds and rain, both indicators of low pressure systems, almost the entire season. A month before when there was better weather, colder air, high pressure weeks on end, they were gobbling their heads off.
Quote from: greencop01 on June 18, 2020, 02:06:35 PMI bet if you combine rising barometric pressure with those lunar graphs that measure peak and low animal activity you would have a fire-cracker measure of gobbling activity. Like Tom Kelly's "Better on a Rising Tide".
Quote from: LaLongbeard on June 18, 2020, 12:17:16 PMI assume you don't really believe that the barometric pressure can be forecasted 9 months in advance?
Quote from: LaLongbeard on June 18, 2020, 12:17:16 PMOne of the ways it could be used would be in scouting. Instead of spending a low pressure day blowing yourself hoarse on your crow call a morning with spike in pressure would greatly increase the opportunity to find Gobblers and if your scouting time is limited you could have fewer silent days. And if your hunting a new area and looking at a 5-10 mile walk into a place you've never been knowing a low pressure day would most likely end in nothing but a dull nature walk might seem less academic at about mile 8 especially if you know 2 days later the pressure will be rising and the chances of a good Gobbling day increase.