My oldest daughter has olfactory senses that reach far beyond the level of paranormal. She can smell a digestive action at 500 meters, or a body that has not been showered, powdered and deodorized within the last 6 minutes at 2 miles.
I can only smell a litter-box-beyond-the-necessary-time-to-empty when I
want to. Through the years of small children in diapers, numerous canines/felines/equines, and foreign military assignments in areas where elevated standards of personal hygiene were
not part of the culture, I think I have learned to eradicate many sensory susceptibilities.
Or simply come to like them.
I love the smell of my dog - and he smells exactly like a dog should (i.e. furry, outdoorsy, and doggy breath). I absolutely ADORE the smell of
my horses - if it could be packaged as an indoor deodorizer (which would rather defeat the original purpose, I realize), I would buy it in bulk.
And after living in Arizona high chaparral for ten years, I still take a deep breath almost every time I step outside to inhale the scent of mesquite, sand and simple clear air coming down from the Huachuca Mountains.
With one MAJOR exception.
Fire.
I live surrounded by wide, open grasslands which, for 93.06% of the year are brown, sun-bleached and
extremely flammable.
I live within clear sight of Mexico, which does
not try in anyway at all to contain their wildfires - they just let them burn out on their own.
After sunset, it's not that bad - I can walk the perimeter of my property with my dog, and it'
s fairly easy to see fire of any noticeable size burning. And in the daytime, smoke is usually present.
And since I detest beyond reasonable cause the smell of burning flesh, I can normally deduce if it is simply a family barbecue upwind.
So what do you do at night when you smell smoke, but can't locate the source?
I can't phone our local volunteer fire department direct without waking someone up - I can't call 911 because it's not an emergency (at least not
yet).
Out of sheer desperation, I call the non-emergency county sheriff's office.
Now to just put this in proportion, our county is 6,219 square miles in size - that's larger than the state of Connecticut, and just slightly smaller than the state of New Jersey.
Lotta area to cover.
So I was extremely grateful to get a polite, courteous gentleman to took the time to calm this old woman's fears of being burned to death in her sleep - which because of recent events is more than slightly elevated.
I'm not afraid of dying - but I am extremely anxious about being burned.