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Hunting & Fishing
To pee or not to pee?
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<blockquote data-quote="r00s7a" data-source="post: 1366907" data-attributes="member: 9675"><p>I agree... with both of you. Urine is a naturally occuring scent. There are pigs, squirrels, bear, coons, and other critters, and they all take a leak in the woods. Not being an expert on the smell of urine in all animals, I can see where a deer might notice the smell, but unless previously conditioned, it could possibly just ignore it and move on. That ol weary buck does not get big by being careless. Where a doe or spike may smell it and just proceed, a buck may not feel the same about it. I think it would be very careless to just go pull an R. Kelly on a fresh scrape. You are totally contaminating a natural occuring process with no benefit that I see. If the buck is visiting the scrape anyway, why take a chance and piss on it? </p><p></p><p>Boots are a whole other subject, that has human written all over it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="r00s7a, post: 1366907, member: 9675"] I agree... with both of you. Urine is a naturally occuring scent. There are pigs, squirrels, bear, coons, and other critters, and they all take a leak in the woods. Not being an expert on the smell of urine in all animals, I can see where a deer might notice the smell, but unless previously conditioned, it could possibly just ignore it and move on. That ol weary buck does not get big by being careless. Where a doe or spike may smell it and just proceed, a buck may not feel the same about it. I think it would be very careless to just go pull an R. Kelly on a fresh scrape. You are totally contaminating a natural occuring process with no benefit that I see. If the buck is visiting the scrape anyway, why take a chance and piss on it? Boots are a whole other subject, that has human written all over it. [/QUOTE]
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