catscratch
Well-Known Member
Predominant wind direction?
I've tried lots of stuff to eliminate my trails. Yotes and deer have always been my test subjects. I can fool deer easier than yotes, but neither are easy. The only way I've found to keep from alerting yotes was with a product called Elimitrax. The only other method that worked to keep yotes/deer from checking out my trail was avoidance.
I've had almost 100% success with crossing deer trails the last few years. I can't say for sure why that is. I believe it's mostly due to treating my knee high rubber boots with ozone. I've employed a dedicated odor regimen for quite a few years now and I know it's helped, but I'd still get some trail crossing busts until I started blowing ozone inside my boots while they are inside a Rubbermade tub. I used to scrub my boots inside and out with Scent-A-Way type detergent but that was time consuming and the boots would need extra time on the drier. Ozone has eliminated the need to wash boots. I'm pretty sure that my success is due to the total combination of odor control measures and not just the ozone. Keeping boots odor-free is made up of several little details.
I tried Elimitrax several years ago and I hated them. They were noisy, clumsy to walk in, and weren't safe to climb screw-in steps.
Tell me about your ozone. Have you seen any degration of the rubber in your boots? Are you just hosing it into the boot and then sealing the tote, or are you giving the outside of your boots a good dose too?
I'm 100% with you on that! I put up with it because it works very well for me.
Tell me about your ozone. Have you seen any degration of the rubber in your boots? Are you just hosing it into the boot and then sealing the tote, or are you giving the outside of your boots a good dose too?
Lol, Tap we do a lot of the same stuff. It's probably hilarious watching me drive while trying to not touch the wheel and not lean back against the seat... or put my coveralls and boots on without touching the outsides of the clothing. I don't touch the environment if I can help it, to the point of wearing rubber gloves to climb my stands. I spray feet and lower legs with antiperspirant also. Even with all that my terrain allows me to enter well thought out sites without crossing trails... so I do.
Wearing gloves to climb is part of boot-odor reduction. Using bare hands to install or climb steps puts skin oil on the step and when we climb back down the oil is transferred to the boot sole. I really hate wearing gloves when I climb. I just feel like I don't have as good of a grip on steps while wearing gloves, but the less skin contact we make with anything in the woods (including our steps) the better.
How many of you guys have watched deer walk up to your tree and smell your steps?
Yep, used to happen from time to time.
Similar story... I learned about a deer's ability to catch scent in 1986 or 87. I was 14 (youngest law allowed a person to deer hunt). I missed a deer because mentally I miscalculated the yardage in the alfalfa field I was hunting. So after my morning hunt I stepped off yardages and poked a couple of sticks into the ground as markers. First doe to hit the field that afternoon walked up to my farthest stick, smelled it, and bolted. Snorting and stomping the whole way. It hit me immediately that I had merely touched a stick 6yrs before and it was enough to freak her out. What was happening at 10:00pm three hours after I left the stand? No wonder I was burning stands out!
Thus starting an almost unhealthy obsession with keeping deer from scenting me or where I had been. It took a while but I finally figured out just don't go where the deer are. But that only works with certain habitats.
Wearing gloves to climb is part of boot-odor reduction. Using bare hands to install or climb steps puts skin oil on the step and when we climb back down the oil is transferred to the boot sole. I really hate wearing gloves when I climb. I just feel like I don't have as good of a grip on steps while wearing gloves, but the less skin contact we make with anything in the woods (including our steps) the better.
How many of you guys have watched deer walk up to your tree and smell your steps?