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Hunting & Fishing
Let's talk about scent control
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<blockquote data-quote="undeg01" data-source="post: 3180230" data-attributes="member: 26476"><p>This is true, though you have to consider that those dogs have been trained to hit on that scent, no matter how slight. A deer’s response is based on the threat level perceived. If I walk down a trail and 2 minutes later a deer comes down the same trail, they might alert and bolt off. If that same deer comes down the trail 2 hrs after I did, there is no doubt there could still be some of my scent left, but that scent is now older and dissipated significantly, so that deer may not even give it a second thought.</p><p></p><p>Point is, the less scent you leave or emit, the lower the likelihood the deer perceive a threat. So although no scent control is 100%, any reduction in scent improves your chances.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="undeg01, post: 3180230, member: 26476"] This is true, though you have to consider that those dogs have been trained to hit on that scent, no matter how slight. A deer’s response is based on the threat level perceived. If I walk down a trail and 2 minutes later a deer comes down the same trail, they might alert and bolt off. If that same deer comes down the trail 2 hrs after I did, there is no doubt there could still be some of my scent left, but that scent is now older and dissipated significantly, so that deer may not even give it a second thought. Point is, the less scent you leave or emit, the lower the likelihood the deer perceive a threat. So although no scent control is 100%, any reduction in scent improves your chances. [/QUOTE]
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