03-23-2005, 06:23 PM
Actually I would agree with you on the waves and the low-light.
There's something to note: you can catch walleyes while it is raining, windy or snowing, it's a matter of how low the barometer goes. Walleyes are affected by the low-pressure at its lowest point as the cold front passes through. I beleive the cutoff point is 29.74 or lower in the low pressure bracket. It can rain or snow at 29.74 or higher and you will catch walleye before the barometer gets too low that they shut down. Hope this gem of a theory helps.
There is a water barometer that you stick in the water that tells you the pressure on the market at Cabelas. (This doesn't work on rivers since there is no body of water to put the high/low air pressure on it so that's why you can catch walleyes 365 days a year.) So check it out in the catalog.
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There's something to note: you can catch walleyes while it is raining, windy or snowing, it's a matter of how low the barometer goes. Walleyes are affected by the low-pressure at its lowest point as the cold front passes through. I beleive the cutoff point is 29.74 or lower in the low pressure bracket. It can rain or snow at 29.74 or higher and you will catch walleye before the barometer gets too low that they shut down. Hope this gem of a theory helps.
There is a water barometer that you stick in the water that tells you the pressure on the market at Cabelas. (This doesn't work on rivers since there is no body of water to put the high/low air pressure on it so that's why you can catch walleyes 365 days a year.) So check it out in the catalog.
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