Tom_in_CA
Gold Member
- Joined
- Mar 23, 2007
- Messages
- 13,803
- Reaction score
- 10,339
- Golden Thread
- 2
- Location
- Salinas, CA
- 🥇 Banner finds
- 2
- Detector(s) used
- Explorer II, Compass 77b, Tesoro shadow X2
- #1
Thread Owner
Question for those of you who hunt in states where it snows and/or freezes. I've got business to do in the upper midwest in Oct. and Nov, so I have a question for you:
The part of California that I'm in, never (or rarely anyhow) ever gets below freezing. It never snows. So I'm totally un-familiar with anything except year-round hunting conditions. However, I know that in states where it freezes during the winters, that ......... there doesn't even necessarily need to be actual snow on the ground, to keep you guys from hunting, BECAUSE the ground itself is frozen, which keeps anyone from digging. Right?
Ok, so question for you guys: When it's the late fall season, where perhaps there may not necessarily be any actual snow on the ground yet ... BUT the night temperatures have already begun to be at 32* or below: At what point does the ground itself freeze, to prohibit digging? I mean, certainly if it *just* reaches those temp's, and only for perhaps an hour or two at the peak of cold of the night, then ...... I would think that this isn't long enough to freeze the ground itself, right? But on the other hand, if it's 32* or colder all night long, then at a certain point, the ground itself freezes, right?
So in your experience, how cold does it have to be, and for how long (hours or days or whatever) to freeze the actual ground itself, to the point where detecting becomes futile?
thanx!
The part of California that I'm in, never (or rarely anyhow) ever gets below freezing. It never snows. So I'm totally un-familiar with anything except year-round hunting conditions. However, I know that in states where it freezes during the winters, that ......... there doesn't even necessarily need to be actual snow on the ground, to keep you guys from hunting, BECAUSE the ground itself is frozen, which keeps anyone from digging. Right?
Ok, so question for you guys: When it's the late fall season, where perhaps there may not necessarily be any actual snow on the ground yet ... BUT the night temperatures have already begun to be at 32* or below: At what point does the ground itself freeze, to prohibit digging? I mean, certainly if it *just* reaches those temp's, and only for perhaps an hour or two at the peak of cold of the night, then ...... I would think that this isn't long enough to freeze the ground itself, right? But on the other hand, if it's 32* or colder all night long, then at a certain point, the ground itself freezes, right?
So in your experience, how cold does it have to be, and for how long (hours or days or whatever) to freeze the actual ground itself, to the point where detecting becomes futile?
thanx!