I was hunting a place I hunt pretty much yearly. the area is part of a migration route. It was very warm for the time of year, and the deer were far and few between. Typically during warm weather the deer were bedded on the north and east facing slopes. I had a buddy I took with me, as he was fairly new to hunting. We were unable to find anything we wanted to pull the trigger on. We had been hunting hard for several days out of a basecamp we packed in about 5 miles. Then during the night while eating dinner the winds out of the north picked up. Well, much more than picked up; 40 to 60 mile per hour winds with gusts stronger. The winds out of the north up there, that time of year, mean very cold winds. It went from daytime highs in the low 80's to below freezing. I told my buddy I had a plan. We were going to get up extra early and make a 4 mile hike in the dark (knowing a place has serous advantages). I took him to a smally canyon that is sheltered from the north winds. We got to the exact spot I wanted to be in, and waited for the sun to rise. We had every single piece of clothing we had with us on, and that 35 to 40 minute wait for the sun to sprinkle a little light into the sky seemed like an eternity is the sub freezing temps as our location was not exactly out of the wind. The bedding area however was. We sat glassing for about 2 hours when I finally spotted a buck get up, feed for a bit and the rebed out of sight. Then another, and another and another, all rebedding out of sight. Finally, a 4x4 and a 3x4 get up and continue feeding. I have my partner set up and ready to shoot, as I am. I tell him to take the 4x4 and I wait for what seems like forever with ampel excellent shot opportunity. Finally, I hear the report of his rifle. Only problem is he wanted me to take the 4x4, but he did not tell me. He shot the 3x4 I was aiming at and ready to shoot. The 4x4 is now doing about 90+ down the canyon. I pick him up in my scope, adjust for a slight lead and pull the trigger. He goes down but is out of sight at the bottom of the canyon. I wait for him to pop out and he never does. Long story short, we both got some nice bucks.
My point here is that you need to consider conditions and be willing to adjust plans and areas you hunt, on the fly based on conditions.
Best of luck!