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How to
Hunt Scent Free
As you move around
hunting, and even when you are just sitting, your body
is giving off millions of scent molecules into the
surrounding air. The clothes and boots that you wear,
and equipment you carry all have odors that add to the
scent pool around you.
The
greatest of the whitetail deer's senses is their nose!

In
hunting areas that see moderate to heavy pressure, the
deer associate human odor with danger and give the
hunter very little leeway for mistakes. Deer in areas
with light hunting pressure are less conditioned to that
association, and lapses in scent control won't have the
same consequences.
When
you are out hunting, if you think "I am sitting facing a
steady wind so I don't need to worry about all that
scent control stuff", think about all the area downwind
of you that is being polluted with your scent.
Some
of the areas you hunt may include a 'hub' where several
deer trails come together, which means your scent will
eliminate a large area of potential. Remember mature
bucks may come from the wrong direction because their
travels are not always regular during the rut.
There
is also the challenge of a variable wind, a swirling
wind, a changing wind, a crosswind, thermals, sea
breezes, gusts, downdrafts and zephyrs.
Remember how many times you have sat around a campfire
only to have the smoke blow into your face as the wind
changes several times in a few hours.
So
hunting on windy days means you have to be aware of
where your scent is going.
Deer
don't tend to move around a lot on windy days because
they lose a lot of two key senses being their smell and
hearing.
The
most deer movement tends to occur on calm or light wind
days.
However on these days, your odor spreads around you in
an increasing scent pool or fog in all directions!
If
there is a light wind it tends to be variable around the
obstacles like trees, rocks, hills and creeks. So your
scent will likely end up in all directions making
hunting that site highly risky at best and in fact it
is best not to hunt prime hunting spots under these
conditions, and put the buck on full alert, or worse,
cause him to change his habits.
However, waiting for the ideal wind for a particular
site may not be an option for reasons such as time
constraints or pressure from other hunters. In that case
you need a scent control system to minimize your scent.
So
how can you control the amount of your scent that
reaches the whitetail's nose?
-
Try to understand wind flow in the area you are
going to hunt, so that means understanding how wind
'flows' over and around obstacles in that area. It
also means understanding what temperature does to
create thermals so that when hot air rises and cool
air sinks you can take advantage of it
-
Reduce your scent as much as practical
An
effective scent control system should include:
-
Before your hunts wash
with unscented antibacterial soap and shampoo and
dry with towels washed with odor-killing detergent
-
Use an odor
neutralizing deodorant on your body for every hunt
-
Brush your teeth with
baking soda and try not to eat, smoke or chew
tobacco after that in order to reduce breath odors
-
Wash all hunting
clothes including socks, gloves, hunting cap and
underwear with odor-killing detergent, and then line
dry them outside, not in a dryer. Store and
transport the clothes in scent-free bags
-
Wash all hunting gear
such as backpack, ropes, harness, stand, grunt tube,
knife, release and wristband. Rifles can be oiled
using a brand that acts as a masking scent. Bow,
arrows and broadheads can be washed with hydrogen
peroxide In general anything you take into the woods
should be used exclusively for the woods and sealed
in a scent free container when not in use
-
Wash rubber boots and
Elimitrax , inside and out, with odor-killing
detergent, and don’t wear them until you get to your
hunting ground as they pick up odors in your vehicle
if used for driving. If you have leather boots, make
sure they are lined with something like Scent-Lok
and sprayed with cover scent and odor neutralizer
-
An activated carbon
Scent-Lok suit will help to dramatically reduce your
odors in the woods. It works by keeping your scent
molecules inside your suit as they are attracted to
the carbon surface, but allowing air and moisture to
pass through the suit. After a while the carbon
needs to be reactivated by placing your suit in a
clothes dryer for a short while. The label on the
suit will provide instructions
-
If you wear your
hunting clothes while travelling to your site, they
will pick up odors from your breakfast, your
vehicle, or any place you stop on the way to your
site, such as a gas station or restaurant
-
When you leave your
vehicle and start walking into your hunting spot,
walk slowly so you don't build up a sweat. If this
is unavoidable, wear several light layers that you
can take off when you get close to your hunting
site, and then put on your heavier clothes
-
When walking in you
can grind your boots in fresh deer droppings
-
Avoid coming into
contact with vegetation while hunting as this leaves
your scent there for hours for deer to discover. Use
your bow or rifle to brush aside branches
-
When you get to your
hunting site, put your hunting clothes on from their
scent free bags. This can either be done while you
are on stand, or a hundred yards away, so you don't
leave a pool of your scent at the base of your
stand. Don't tuck your trousers into your boots
otherwise your scent can escape out the top of the
boot with each step. Put your trouser over your
boots so the scent from your feet can only travel up
inside your Scent-Lok suit
-
Climb up to your tree
stand using activated carbon gloves so you don't
leave scent on the steps or bark
-
If you are hunting in
a light or variable wind situation, every half hour
you should release a wind checking device such as
Wind Floaters or Smoke Stack to see what the wind is
doing, ALL the way to the ground
If
you are going to reduce your scent using the system
above, you should follow all of the steps and not just a
few of them.
The
aim is to be as odor free as possible. However, having
done all of the above, you should still hunt thinking
about the wind as though you haven't done any of them.
If
you combine hunting scent free with a toolkit of tips
and techniques, you are well down the road to
successfully
bagging your buck of a lifetime.
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