- Banned
- #61
Lets stay on topic here dude...we're not talking about douching yourself with smoke, or even cow piss to mask YOUR sent. Campfires was the topic and the direct smoke from one and its effect on animals.All science starts as an opinion piece, my man. IF I smell like smoke and not people THEN prey animals may be less likely to smell me or be (as) spooked when they do.
Try and try again. See if it works. If it does and it is quantifiable, theory confirmed. And it is quantifiable that animals are less spooked about fire (unless it's the obvious, barn burner) then they are of human predators.
I'm far from saying that fire is the solution to any animal's olfactory sense. I'm saying, it's certainly a nice side effect that you're less detectable through scent. We all know nothing will beat it and that there's a huge market for scent blocking sprays, ozone generators, pucks and cover scents, but human beings have been using fire to cover their odor for literally thousands of years.
I am also definitely not trying to say that cigar smoke is the way to go. Lol. If you don't like having a fire, this conversation is never going to sway you but a quick google search and a little experience will corroborate everything I'm saying. Carbon (a known scent killer-charcoal-activated carbon-) is produced in the burning process. The said carbon traps and kills scent producing enzymes on the clothing and skin.
I posted those articles to simply show that I'm not just making this stuff up. They are by no means iron clad evidence.
I can make myself smell like alot of things rather than a human...what if I make myself smell like a mtn lion? I'm making my scent, but pretty sure elk may equate that to danger. Pretty safe to assume, smelling like the fire that almost ran them down say 2 years ago woukd trigger the same alert.