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How long does human scent linger?
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<blockquote data-quote="Shed Hunter" data-source="post: 5504835" data-attributes="member: 10556"><p>I would speculate human pheromones play a big role in the deer's response to the scent they detect. You stink a lot worse than you think you do, and that smell changes with the way you are thinking. As powerful as a deer's nose is I am inclined to believe they can identify these smells and are more aware of their ability to do so than humans. When you see a deer coming in and the buck fever kicks in your body is in an adrenaline rush. It is very likely that deer will sense something isn't right and will become alarmed. Have you ever seen a video of a perfectly healthy deer walking right up to a hunter that had no intentions of shooting it? It probably doesn't have much to do with the scent control the hunter is using. Instead the deer probably couldn't see the person, hear the person, or identify the human scent as a threat because it wasnt</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Shed Hunter, post: 5504835, member: 10556"] I would speculate human pheromones play a big role in the deer’s response to the scent they detect. You stink a lot worse than you think you do, and that smell changes with the way you are thinking. As powerful as a deer’s nose is I am inclined to believe they can identify these smells and are more aware of their ability to do so than humans. When you see a deer coming in and the buck fever kicks in your body is in an adrenaline rush. It is very likely that deer will sense something isn’t right and will become alarmed. Have you ever seen a video of a perfectly healthy deer walking right up to a hunter that had no intentions of shooting it? It probably doesn’t have much to do with the scent control the hunter is using. Instead the deer probably couldn’t see the person, hear the person, or identify the human scent as a threat because it wasnt [/QUOTE]
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How long does human scent linger?
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