People Really Stink
Many people wonder how a dog can sniff out a small rodent, but it is relatively easy for them.
First, they have better noses that are indeed, genetically superior, but they also practice using them more.
When they smell something unique, they know what it is, where it was, which way it went and most likely where it is right now.
The more wild the animal the better it knows, as it relies on its sense of smell for survival, either from predators or to eat other animals, and without this keen sense of smell, it simply could not live in the wild for long, it would either be eaten or go hungry.
In the Vietnam War our enemy said they could smell when they were near the US Long-Range Patrols, before we came to the war, the French were found the same way, by smell.
The French as a culture took fewer showers, and American Soldiers ate fatty foods, so their sweat was unique.
Interestingly enough, some of our more advanced special forces used smell to find the Viet Cong too.
When the people exited the Biosphere II Project, after being in it for 2-years they had friends and family there to greet them, and noted that "People Really Stink," says Jane Poynter.
In fact, she hadn't been with her family for 2-years but had to pull back from the hugs, because they smelled and reeked of perfume, hairspray, cologne, and other smells.
Something that was not in the Biosphere II, something they had not been exposed to in more than two years.
Please consider this.
First, they have better noses that are indeed, genetically superior, but they also practice using them more.
When they smell something unique, they know what it is, where it was, which way it went and most likely where it is right now.
The more wild the animal the better it knows, as it relies on its sense of smell for survival, either from predators or to eat other animals, and without this keen sense of smell, it simply could not live in the wild for long, it would either be eaten or go hungry.
In the Vietnam War our enemy said they could smell when they were near the US Long-Range Patrols, before we came to the war, the French were found the same way, by smell.
The French as a culture took fewer showers, and American Soldiers ate fatty foods, so their sweat was unique.
Interestingly enough, some of our more advanced special forces used smell to find the Viet Cong too.
When the people exited the Biosphere II Project, after being in it for 2-years they had friends and family there to greet them, and noted that "People Really Stink," says Jane Poynter.
In fact, she hadn't been with her family for 2-years but had to pull back from the hugs, because they smelled and reeked of perfume, hairspray, cologne, and other smells.
Something that was not in the Biosphere II, something they had not been exposed to in more than two years.
Please consider this.
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