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whatever 28-12-2004 04:18 PM

question about flower fragrance
 
Hello. I wonder if anyone can answer a possibly dumb question - it's a
matter of settling a dispute. Does a frequently sniffed flower have
less
fragrance than one that is not sniffed? A friend of mine insists that
roses at a convenient height for smelling always smell less intense
than
ones that you have to go out of your way to smell. He thinks that with
each sniff, some of the fragrance disappears and is not replaced. I
don't
agree. If anyone has any knowledge (or even an opinion) about this, I'd
be interested in hearing it. Thanks in advance.


[email protected] 28-12-2004 05:08 PM

http://www.cf.ac.uk/biosi/staff/jaco...olfactres.html
it is called habituation, basically our smell receptors get saturated and the brain
turns them off for that smell, the receptors wont fire again for a while.
the rose is continually putting out the odor has nothing to do with being smelled or
not smelled by humans. Ingrid

"whatever" wrote:

Hello. I wonder if anyone can answer a possibly dumb question - it's a
matter of settling a dispute. Does a frequently sniffed flower have
less
fragrance than one that is not sniffed? A friend of mine insists that
roses at a convenient height for smelling always smell less intense
than
ones that you have to go out of your way to smell. He thinks that with
each sniff, some of the fragrance disappears and is not replaced. I
don't
agree. If anyone has any knowledge (or even an opinion) about this, I'd
be interested in hearing it. Thanks in advance.




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paghat 28-12-2004 05:47 PM

In article .com,
"whatever" wrote:

Hello. I wonder if anyone can answer a possibly dumb question - it's a
matter of settling a dispute. Does a frequently sniffed flower have
less
fragrance than one that is not sniffed? A friend of mine insists that
roses at a convenient height for smelling always smell less intense
than
ones that you have to go out of your way to smell. He thinks that with
each sniff, some of the fragrance disappears and is not replaced. I
don't
agree. If anyone has any knowledge (or even an opinion) about this, I'd
be interested in hearing it. Thanks in advance.


That's so funny. Ask your pal if an often-smelled cat turd also gets its
odor sucked out of it by noses.

-paghat the ratgirl

--
"Of what are you afraid, my child?" inquired the kindly teacher.
"Oh, sir! The flowers, they are wild," replied the timid creature.
-from Peter Newell's "Wild Flowers"
Visit the Garden of Paghat the Ratgirl: http://www.paghat.com

Eyebright 29-12-2004 01:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by whatever
Does a frequently sniffed flower have
less
fragrance than one that is not sniffed?

theres a thing a Viola...V odorata maybe ..which smells intense when first sniffed then ya nose cant get the scent again for 3 or 4 hours coz the scent did somethin to ya nose...this is a fact.


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