When do you have more success? By me it seems like the birds fly later when it is sunny. On cloudy days they fly most of the day. Does this sound right?
Here we have to go with very clear and the colder the better, and here cold comes with clear. And my thinking is they act like Coots. They gather heavy and very close together at night the colder it gets. They seem to be more spread out in the area on milder mornings. For some reason here heavy clouds or the threat of rain they stay on the the mountain sides and are very stubborn to leave them. I always figured that they stayed in the safety of the woods in case their feathers get saturated. The weather breaks, sun comes out bright and shiny, they start mobbing the fields. I've also noticed the colder mornings, the larger the murders, and it may also be a personal preference, but I want them to come in five or less at a time. I may be way off base with my thinking, but our best numbers always come on cold clear days. And looking at the Texas Crow Patrols website pictures, look at the sky in their photos. Figured they would pull for clear skys after seeing those monster shoots. And on a side note, Man I like Texas. They go by the golden rule. Golden Rule= Do not mess with my family ,my home, my horse and my gun.
-- Edited by BBOutdoors on Wednesday 6th of February 2013 04:43:08 AM
-- Edited by BBOutdoors on Wednesday 6th of February 2013 04:54:02 AM
-- Edited by BBOutdoors on Wednesday 6th of February 2013 06:02:04 AM
Thanks guys, just wanted to hear some other opinions/observations. I have had much better luck(success) on cloudy days and I'm off tomorrow with a mostly cloudy forecast. Should be the first cloudy day hunt I've had in 3 weeks. Can't wait.
I find cold frosty days with wind are best, but still foggy and crisp days are also good. Generally, if it's cold, it'sgood. Too much rain and you get few birds, and it knackers your kit too
-- Edited by Redditch on Thursday 7th of February 2013 02:53:24 PM
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If it moves and is legal but also moral, SHOOT IT !!
The day that we killed over a hundred, my avatar photo, it was freezing rain that changed to snow and then cleared off to bright sunshine. As soon as the sun came out, the crows stopped flying.
What does it matter? I go anytime the season is open sunny day or cloudy, as long as it's not snowing hard or raining or below zero. I LIKE cloudy days because it's annoying to look to the east with prevailing westerly winds on a sunny morning. The best days are ALWAYS during the fall migration when the wind is out of or quartering out of the north cloudy or sunny. Those will be the days of big kills.
Update; last week in the clouds we got 25 and, sad to say, at least that many misses. Sat until dark so didn't get any good pictures. Hunted yesterday in the bright sunshine and only got 8. Didn't see half the birds from the previous week and they a lot stayed up high. This year I'm hunting this spot once a week so it gets a good break. Previous totals were 30, 20 and 19 which is good for this area. Last year I hunted it pretty hard and couldn't total more than 10 on any one particular day so letting it "breathe" has been paying off. If for nothing else, I would choose hunting on cloudy days just because it is easier on the eyes. What a headache from looking up in the bright sky for a few hours.
-- Edited by ba24 on Friday 15th of February 2013 01:17:56 PM
While cloudy days are good days to hunt in I have had some of the largest shoots in both sunny or cloudy types of days. I think it's more a matter of being in the right spot that particular day.