Remove nasty smells (dead mice / pigeons) with incense

Sounds strange, right? We live on an old farm and therefore always have to deal with mice, sometimes with dead ones.

Run somewhere (often behind wood paneling), the time blessed and not findable - but to recognize the stench. Also nice are dead pigeons in the fireplace - you have something for a long time.

If you are not so keen on it, but with perfume spray, scented towels and airing is not getting along (smell of decay is enormously resistant to airing), that may help my tip.


From the next best teahouse, medieval market or on the Internet look and incense resin get to smoke. Does not cost much, are small yellowish-brown globules - you do not need much of.

The whole fax stuff with smoking cans and charcoal and Co. you can give yourself (who has it anyway, use it) - a fragrance lamp (below tealight, on top of it bowl with water and oil) is quite enough.

Replacing the water bowl with anything made of metal, can be a matching metal plate or just a normal old saucer covered with 6-fold aluminum foil. Tealight underneath, 4-5 beads of incense on it and off to the room in question, as close as possible to the suspected mortuary.


Fire protection I assume - the beads are very hot!

If you use a (metal) bowl / plate without aluminum foil, you can never use it again for something else, because the resin burns.

Let the whole thing smoke until it is used up - and the stench has disappeared and will not come back.

I do not know why it works, but it works. Although the cattle continue to farther, it does not stink again. Or only very minimal, I shoot then just a second charge smoke behind and at the latest then is peace.

Yes, the smell takes some getting used to - but the smell of decay is much worse.

CAN'T BELIEVE THEY PUT THIS IN THE GAME | God Of War - Part 6 | April 2024