Scent Free Wash Question
#1
Scent Free Wash Question
What all should be washed in scent free clothing wash? I understand that shirts, pants, socks, and such should be washed, but should wool gloves and hats be washed as well? I'm also planning on tossing my pack in because it reeks of vinyl. And specifically for my bow wielding friends... Should armguards and releases be washed in scent free soap as well?
Thanks
Thanks
#2
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location:
Posts: 2,186
And your bow (fully rigged out) and your release and your boots and your belt and all of your arrows .... in the washing machine too. And don't forget to use scent free tooth paste ... and before I forget, don't poot in the stand. Not trying to go over board here ... do what you will, but remember that you will still not be undetectible to a deer's nose. Stay down wind if at all possible.
#3
Fork Horn
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 105
In my opinion all the scent blockers and unscented soap and most everything else you think is designed to give you the edge, is really designed to line the pockets of the manufacture.
Scentless soap. How do you know its scentless? Just because you can't smell it? I've listened to amazing tales of how far away deer can scent you. You don't really think that so called scentless soap can't be smelled by deer just because you can't smell it! I believe the biggest edge any products like that give you is the belief you can't be smelled or that your scent is blocked or that you smell like what ever scent stuff you've bought.
Guy's may have been hunting for years before that stuff came out and always got their deer. After they got this or that wonder scent remover or maybe the one that makes you smell like a doe in heat, they still killed their deer. What has changed? A new product hit the market, jobs were created and guys bought this stuff believing they had an edge that I doubt ever existed in the first place.
The only reason man ever even took a bath before hunting is because his wife told him he smelled better and the deer didn't care.
Scentless soap. How do you know its scentless? Just because you can't smell it? I've listened to amazing tales of how far away deer can scent you. You don't really think that so called scentless soap can't be smelled by deer just because you can't smell it! I believe the biggest edge any products like that give you is the belief you can't be smelled or that your scent is blocked or that you smell like what ever scent stuff you've bought.
Guy's may have been hunting for years before that stuff came out and always got their deer. After they got this or that wonder scent remover or maybe the one that makes you smell like a doe in heat, they still killed their deer. What has changed? A new product hit the market, jobs were created and guys bought this stuff believing they had an edge that I doubt ever existed in the first place.
The only reason man ever even took a bath before hunting is because his wife told him he smelled better and the deer didn't care.
#4
Spike
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 78
Gee, some of you guys need to eat some fiber. Use the wind to your advantage, sure. There are those times when a shift of wind direction, or a deer coming from an unexpected direction blows your game plan. In these instances, every little bit helps and might give you that extra second or two to make the shot.
Tide has an unscented detergent that, also, contains no color (UV) enhancers. It's not marketed for hunters so, nobody's "lining their pockets" at your expense.
Tide has an unscented detergent that, also, contains no color (UV) enhancers. It's not marketed for hunters so, nobody's "lining their pockets" at your expense.
#5
Spike
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Maryland
Posts: 15
Exactly. I shower before every morning hunt. Have to to wake up The only scent product I use is the "scent away" spray earth scent. There are to many variables whether a deer will smell you or not. I kill deer every year and my routine doesn't change. I wash clothes in normal detergent, shower with soap and even put regular deodorant on. I spray all my gear with scent away before entering the woods and call it good. I'm sure there have been deer that have scented me without even me realizing it but it is what it is, still end up with meat in the freezer. I know guys that smoke cigarettes in the stand and still kill deer. All those scent free products are a waste of time and effort in my opinion.
#6
Save yourself a ton of money & use baking soda as a washing detergent.
Put a spoon full of baking soda & peroxide in a clean spray bottle, add water & you got scent away for the field.
Hunt a cross wind or the wind in your face.
Put a spoon full of baking soda & peroxide in a clean spray bottle, add water & you got scent away for the field.
Hunt a cross wind or the wind in your face.
#7
Giant Nontypical
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: PA.
Posts: 5,195
boy,taking showers in mornings .some are making their hunting very hard.
i just go hunting and 46 bucks and most with bow.
i do smoke my clothes once a week and my stand ,boots everything.i use pine needles/oak leaves.
thats it.i dont use any after shave or shaving cream ,anything that has stink.i wash my bed sheets etc in sscent free detergent during hunting season.
i just go hunting and 46 bucks and most with bow.
i do smoke my clothes once a week and my stand ,boots everything.i use pine needles/oak leaves.
thats it.i dont use any after shave or shaving cream ,anything that has stink.i wash my bed sheets etc in sscent free detergent during hunting season.
#9
Typical Buck
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Northern Michigan
Posts: 974
Hunting clothes....
My hunting clothes/gear have never seen the inside of a house or cabin. I take a shower before each hunt w/ a baking soda /water solution. Why? Gotta wash your @#$% anyway (or may be some don't), so I might as well. I have a washer in my shop that has never seen any type of detergent only baking soda. I air dry them outdoors, pack them in vacuum bags. You gotta wash your clothes anyway so why not use baking soda. As for commercial products, they are all chemicals not native to the environment, been using baking soda since '69 and nothing else.
#10