Mirage is my next go to wind indicator if I can't use the string.
It's very important to focus your scope between you and the target when finding mirage. If you just look at the mirage behind the target...you are seeing the wind behind the target...not in front of it. Some scopes are good at seeing mirage and others are not. My Leupold is very good and I can leave the focus at 40-45y when viewing mirage and still see a 55y target well enough that I don't have to refocus and shoot.
Mike
This was also posted by me on a windflag thread today but does seem like it belongs here as well.
Of recent months my attempt to understand the wind, or my lack of understanding the wind, has me now playing with several different wind flags or windicators.
I have at least four different flags that a very good buddy made for me in Ohio (sit on tripods and you level them type) very simple and very efficient.
Ray Hill's flags are absolutely exceptional fine workmanship - crazy responsive to even the slightest movement. They sit on some nice B&H tripods i purchased on Amazon and Ray's leveling system is da Bomb of crazy coolness.
Rays health is waning with age and cancer he said, but, he says hes got a few more flags in him. Ray Hill <
[email protected]>
Thomas Orlando's Flags are also good, but they are the - poke in the earth - fiberglass and or carbon type so they are a bit harder to level up or change the height. Thomas Orlando <
[email protected]>
I also have two different cheap amazon types - poke in the earth and they are just so so and they bend at a whim.
I have also created some very basic engineering streamers, which in their own way may be just fine.
I am also laying out field target reset lines close to my wind flags
@thomasair .
I am comparing, and writing down almost all of the subtle information these wind toy methods are conveying to me but jeez... there are some bizarre things that the wind can and does do.
Yesterday i was looking at a wind flag streamer (elevation 36") through my scope and the streamer was hanging straight down with no real indication of direction; yet the grass in front of the field target itself, just a few feet away at ground level, was definitely moving left to right.
Wow what a revelation - just a change a foot or so from the ground and the wind speed increases; way high up, even more so.
it would seem one could obsess themselves in a hurricane of data all to no avail... yet i shoot much better when apply the input the flags are giving me.
Point is, I am wondering if a wind meter that i can blue tooth to my phone will aid in my understanding of this crazy visual data field because i am not that good at guessing.
i'm all ears... or streamers at this point. I seldom get mirage in my backyard this time of year... maybe when it warms up.