page 1 page 2 page 3 page 4 page 5 page 6 page 7 page 8 page 9 page 10 page 11 page 12 page 13 page 14 page 15 page 16 page 17 page 18 page 19 page 20 page 21 page 22 page 23 page 24 page 25 page 26 page 27 page 28 page 29 page 30 page 31 page 32 page 33 page 34 page 35 page 36 page 37 page 38 page 39 page 40 page 41 page 42 page 43 page 44 page 45 page 46 page 47 page 48 page 49 page 50 page 51 page 52 page 53 page 54 page 55 page 56 page 57 page 58 page 59 page 60 page 61 page 62 page 63 page 64 page 65 page 66 page 67 page 68 page 69 page 70
|
False ies and other fish and wildlife. The largest influences occur when the moon is directly overhead and directly underfoot. These two positions are referred to as major activity periods. There are two other daily peri-ods of lunar influence that occur halfway between the overhead and underfoot po-sitions. These periods coincide with the moonrise and moonset, and are called minor activity periods. This is where we get the terms Major and Minor. Typically Ma-jors last about two hours with the influence starting an hour before the charted time. A Minor is half that amount of time, lasting an hour with the influence starting a half hour before the charted time. So if your chart tells you that a Major will occur at 12: 00pm, expect the activity to start around 11: 00am and last until about 1: 00pm. If the chart tells you there will be a Minor at 5: 00pm, the activity should start at 4: 30pm and last until 5: 30pm. Majors are typically stronger when the moon is in the underfoot posi-tion. Past experiences have shown more muskie activity happens during this period, especially when it occurs during the daylight hours when fishing can be tougher in gen-eral. Continued on page 23 False |