I am wondering if the folks that don't minimize scent hunt are moving around a lot, and those who practice scent control are stand/ground blind hunters? Nearly all of the tree stand hunters I deal with are very careful about scent control.
I hunted near a fellow that smoked and did not bathe or use a scent eliminator during a hunt. He never shot anything for all the years (5-6) I hunted around him. I even let him hunt my best stands. He said I was just very lucky. His statement to another guy about me was, "he could set up in the Safeway parking lot and kill elk." I think the big difference between us was the level of odor emitted.
I assume that you folks that keep pumping on a squeeze bottle and do not try to minimize your scent, do not set up and wait to ambush your query. You are not sitting in a ground blind, or in a tree stand in a basin. When the wind starts shifting you are done for an hour or so until it is more settled.
I assume that you tie yourself in knots trying to keep the wind in your face on some days and that you still get busted. You can get busted even minimizing your scent, but you will win many times also. Since washing and minimizing scent costs so little, I would feel "silly" going around with excessive stink or trying to cover mine with some other odor.
I feel kind of silly spending tag gas or grocery money on stuff proven not to effectively defeat there noses.
What in the world are you talking about? How much money are we talking about? I use Ivory unscented soap to wash with. Unscented shampoo. I use Arm and Hammer unscented laundry detergent with no ultra violet brighteners. As for scent blocker, I bought a gallon on clearance sale over 10 years ago and still have enough for several seasons. I am sure it cost under $5. Washing does cost a little, but very little. I doubt it costs $0.50 per year to use all of the scent control I use. Pine needles, sage and Juniper are all still free.
You are right keeping clean and using scent eliminators does not eliminate all scent, but it does reduce it significantly. I can tell there is a difference.
Yes hunting has advanced since the stone age. I also agree Hiawatha did not use modern scent elimination techniques, but he did not operate under the same game rules we do today either. His hunting season was a little longer than ours. What he had to shoot at was a little more liberal that what we have. He could also get the whole tribe to push the animals up a draw to him and his associates waiting in ambush.
One of the fellows posted above, if I understand him right, uses scent control for Whitetails but not elk. Why would it be different for Whitetails than elk if you are basically using the same hunting technique?
Gumbo: That makes sense. I hunt from a tree stand for elk 90% of the time so scent control is important and much more productive. My elk hunting is very similar to your Whitetail hunting.
Even though I was giving Juan a hard time, I knew where he was coming from. Running around allday sweating is going to make extreme measusre for scent control impractical. Scent control is more effective when you are not working up a sweat, or should I say when you are nearly shivering in a tree or in a blind.