Jase....yes thermal & NV are even that much better than red, green, purple, yellow...any color of lights. Some folks swear by lights and for some it may be their only legal option. I wasn't killing anything in the daylight, spent about $1k on Sniper Hog lights thinking it would be the ticket. I killed a whopping ONE coyote with lights in about 8 months of very hard hunting. I was converted to thermal/NV and it flipped the switch. In the areas I hunt, the fields are smaller...3 acres to 20 acres max...there is just too much brush at the field edges for lights to work. There is a reason it didn't work for me and no one else I know of or talk to around here uses them here...or least if they do, they don't kill much. It's not all about just thermal/NV letting you kill more, it lets you see more and learn more...as in how they approach, how many are really there etc.
Last night for example...at one stand at the 3 minute mark we picked up a dog with thermal that was just inside the brushline of the field. We wouldn't have seen it and couldn't have shot with lights. It didn't come in the open but couldn't get our wind because of the set up, so we just waited for him to come in the field. He ducked back in and we could see him moving left...couldn't have done that with lights. He popped back up in the brushline, but again didn't come into the field. He ducked back in so after a minute I switched to pup distress. He came back once again, but this time there were two. We could see them in thermal plain as day, but stayed just inside the brushline. Since my buddy shoots with thermal and I shoot with NV, we were waiting for at least one to step into the open for me to shoot. I could have made a headshot on the eyeshine on one of them, but was confident they would come into the field considering the setup and their interest in the call. However, as coyotes go...they never did and we didn't shoot, even though my partner could have multiple times with his thermal scope. If we had lights we would not have known they were there, what they were doing and the shadows from the trees and brush likely would have spooked them. I would have thought it was a blank stand, not knowing I just educated two dogs. Instead, I now know they are there and where they are likely to come from. We didn't get hard busted and I'm confident in going back soon to try them again from a different angle. My guess on why they didn't come in the field...A LOT of moonlight last night, so they were hanging up just inside the edge and looking. When I picked up the call, I had forgot to turn the foxjack decoy on...stupid move, as most coming to the call lately run a circle around the decoy and even had one biting it a few weeks ago.