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<blockquote data-quote="Muddyboots" data-source="post: 2612126" data-attributes="member: 63925"><p>I usually just watch what I eat to manage potential scent.<img class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" alt="😂" title="Face with tears of joy :joy:" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f602.png" data-shortname=":joy:" /></p><p></p><p>I've tried about everything, some coverups do "help" to some degree. Ozone works to some degree, I have one. But I have seen deer react to ozone as well. You might be able to "cheat" the wind a little but I just don't believe anything is 100% coverup except managing the wind. I use total scent mgmt like most; clothes non scent clean, hang outside after washing to improve odor reduction, bathe with non scented products (pack in hunts whole other discussion), coverup products on your gear, packs etc, use wind indicators religiously, if direction changes BAIL OUT ASAP to prevent souring stand, even what food you bring can add to scent mgmt. Your boots are most often overlooked. Do not wear while driving, you can pick up odors from anything on soles. NEVER pump gas, drop by convenience stores etc. The inside of any boit needs to be managed as well. .The deer's nose is by far your biggest "enemy" to conquer and its crazy what they can smell. A buck looking for estrus scent is on high alert for scent so anything at all will be scented by him. I also plot my track to stand to avoid leaving any ground scent in predictable areas. Every little bit helps.</p><p>YMMV</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Muddyboots, post: 2612126, member: 63925"] I usually just watch what I eat to manage potential scent.😂 I've tried about everything, some coverups do "help" to some degree. Ozone works to some degree, I have one. But I have seen deer react to ozone as well. You might be able to "cheat" the wind a little but I just don't believe anything is 100% coverup except managing the wind. I use total scent mgmt like most; clothes non scent clean, hang outside after washing to improve odor reduction, bathe with non scented products (pack in hunts whole other discussion), coverup products on your gear, packs etc, use wind indicators religiously, if direction changes BAIL OUT ASAP to prevent souring stand, even what food you bring can add to scent mgmt. Your boots are most often overlooked. Do not wear while driving, you can pick up odors from anything on soles. NEVER pump gas, drop by convenience stores etc. The inside of any boit needs to be managed as well. .The deer's nose is by far your biggest "enemy" to conquer and its crazy what they can smell. A buck looking for estrus scent is on high alert for scent so anything at all will be scented by him. I also plot my track to stand to avoid leaving any ground scent in predictable areas. Every little bit helps. YMMV [/QUOTE]
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