Most hunters are diligent about the obvious stuff: human body odor, detergent smell, gasoline from the truck. But there is one scent source that gets far less attention and it follows you into the woods every single morning.
Breakfast.
Food and Kitchen Odors Absorb Into Your Gear
You get up before dawn. You make coffee. You cook eggs, fry some bacon, or heat up something quick before you head out. You eat, get dressed, and drive to the property. By the time you are walking in, your outer layer has been sitting in a kitchen environment for 30 to 45 minutes absorbing food odors the entire time.
Grease molecules from cooking travel through the air and settle on fabric surfaces. Coffee steam does the same. Even just standing in a kitchen while something heats up is enough to deposit odor compounds on your clothing. Fabric is a natural trap for airborne scent, and your hunting jacket is no different.
Beyond the morning routine, consider everything else your gear is exposed to before a hunt. Riding in a vehicle next to a fast food bag. Sitting in a house where someone made dinner the night before. Being near a campfire at hunting camp. All of it is adding layers of foreign odor to your gear before you ever step into the deer woods.
Hunters Focus on Body Odor and Miss Everything Else
The hunting scent control industry is almost entirely focused on human body odor, and for good reason. But that narrow focus causes hunters to overlook the dozens of other odor sources that are accumulating on their gear every day.
A deer that has lived in the woods its entire life has a scent map of its environment. It knows what belongs and what does not. Bacon grease does not belong. Fast food does not belong. Your morning coffee does not belong. Any of those smells carried into the deer woods on your clothing is a foreign signal that triggers alertness, wariness, and avoidance.
You can use the most expensive scent-free body wash on the market and still blow a hunt because you made eggs that morning and put your jacket on in the kitchen.
Odorless Outdoorsman Eliminates Whatever Is on Your Gear
The beauty of Odorless Outdoorsman is that it does not care what type of odor is on your gear. Human body odor, food smells, gasoline, campfire, dog smell from the truck, all of it is a target for the OAM formula.
Spray down your complete outer layer right before you walk away from your vehicle. Saturate every surface, paying extra attention to areas closest to your face and upper body where cooking odors tend to concentrate most heavily. The OAM molecules bond with odor compounds on contact, regardless of their source, and eliminate them at the molecular level.
Because the formula is completely unscented, it leaves no fragrance behind to replace what it removes. Your gear comes out smelling like nothing, which is exactly what you want when you are heading into pressured hunting ground.
Make it the last thing you do before you leave the truck. Spray down. Let it settle for a minute. Walk in clean.
The Details Add Up
The hunters who consistently kill mature deer on pressured land are not luckier than everyone else. They are more thorough. They close every gap in their scent control system, including the ones most people do not think about.
Food odor is one of those gaps. Odorless Outdoorsman closes it.
Pick it up today and start being more thorough than the deer expects you to be.