I've dealt with smelly coworkers. One who didn't wear deodorant and one I have currently who has to dump at the same time every day. You know just to avoid the bathroom that time of day.A co-worker's post-Christmas flatulence. The were only two of us in the offices (during the Christmas break) and I think they must have been letting fly repeatedly in their own small office for most of the day perhaps sub-consciously thinking they were on her own -probably reinforced by not having seen me till late in the day when I walked in. It was like walking into an invisible wall of sewerage stench, it quite took my breath away as I awaited my nose getting used to the smell (and "normalising it") whilst trying not to flee.
Dead Lion. Smelled like a dead Lion.And what did it smell like?
You must have had some interesting jobs. Skunk spray isn't bad from a distance but pretty bad if you're up close. I was with a friend and he hit one with his car and that stench was overpowering. I also agree that humans can smell worse.Giant anteater diarrhea. In the end, I had to throw away the pants covered with it.
Closely followed by liquefying carcesses (just cleaned a full box this morning) left outdoors, purulent / gangrenous infections and bursting abscesses, especially in the GIT and genital tract, fouling fetuses, anal gland infections, neglected pig farms, working in the slaughterhouse in the summer...
Then skunk spray, maned wolves and bush dog in groups, stressed gorillas, vampire bat colonies, blasts of whales, vomit & feces of various carnivorous / piscivorous species (among others, crows fed on cat food, defecating large pythons/cobras...).
How all of them smelled? They made me envy people like BeakerUK...and significantly decreased my sensitivity to smell. However, humans can smell worse.
Just one (profession).You must have had some interesting jobs
I can relate to that!It is a great advantage having no sense of smell sometimes...