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re: Deer Scents

Posted on 10/25/23 at 9:41 am to
Posted by EarlyBird
Member since Jun 2006
4103 posts
Posted on 10/25/23 at 9:41 am to
Ask any police officer who uses drug dogs. People often try to mask the scent of something with another more powerful scent. The problem is that the dogs can disseminate both scents. Deer are no different. Therefore, I do not buy the "cover scent" premise. As far as attractants go, I'm not sure how effective they are, but I'm sure your human odor will be mixed in with it. I'm interested to hear if anything works.
Posted by TheDrunkenTigah
Baton Rouge
Member since Aug 2011
17377 posts
Posted on 10/25/23 at 11:48 am to
quote:

People often try to mask the scent of something with another more powerful scent. The problem is that the dogs can disseminate both scents. Deer are no different. Therefore, I do not buy the "cover scent" premise


All true, deer can smell like we can see color and adding another scent doesn’t accomplish much but there may be something to the evercalm. Blood trackers will tell you the dogs aren’t following blood, they’re following stress hormones from the interdigital glands. That’s why a good tracking dog can cross multiple deer trails and stay on the scent. Evercalm is marketed as the other hormones, ones that the same gland emits when they feel content and safe, so there may be something to it making them feel more comfortable and less spooky in bow range if placed where they can smell it and not you. No idea if it actually works, it’s just sitting in a grey area between cover scent and attractant. There’s some evidence now that deer can identify each other by that hormone signature and do so in scrapes, so even if it does work it may put them on edge that a new deer has showed up.
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