I’m sure each region is slightly different, but for Washington we do well when you have a steady wind that is below 25mph with temps ranging from 15-50. With stronger winds we hunt much tighter to cover, it works but those days are not as productive. The one exception with weather for me is when you have an abnormally cold snap, I won’t even go out anymore in that. For example, the areas we mainly hunt average winter temps from 10-30 degrees for the lows. Last year we had a sudden cold snap that dropped the temps to -15 at night with a high of 0. I went against past experience and tried calling for three days and didn’t see a single coyote. Not even wandering around. Doesn’t make sense, but its what we have experienced consistently over the years. I also prefer cloudy days, but we do well on sunny days.
For calling sequences it kinda depends on how pressured an area is. For the most part we run the call for a minute or two with one call. I will pause for a minute and then replay the same sound usually for another minute or so and pause again for a minute. If we don’t see anything I switch sounds and try again. The total time on stand is 10-15 minutes. This is for coyotes, for cats we run the call almost nonstop for 30-45 minutes.