To manage and reduce the strong cockatiel smell in your home, you can clean the bird's cage regularly, provide good ventilation, use air purifiers or filters, and consider using odor-neutralizing products. Additionally, maintaining a clean living environment and regularly bathing your cockatiel can help minimize the smell.
Well, it depends on if the cockatiel is willing to raise the egg that is obviously not it's egg. If it is, then the bluebird chick will learn how to live life as a cockatiel. The bluebird will never have a crest, but it will learn the cockatiel's language as it's own and think it is a cockatiel because that is the type of bird it is living with. However, if you had a wild cockatiel and you set a bluebird egg in with the other eggs, the cockatiel would reject the eggs because they do not look right or smell right, and would drop the egg out of the nest. I hope that answered your question. :) - Emily Sage
Raccoons have an excellent sense of smell.
they smell musky but not too strong.
because it's a strong smell
amphibians does have a sense of smell
a strong minty smell
Absolutely not. If there is a strong smell of gas at the meter, call the gas company.
Males have a strong smell, females have a lesser of smell.
so they can smell things to kill
Warm, oily and strong smell
It can, if you have a strong sense of smell.
Yes, balsam typically has a strong, aromatic smell that is described as fresh, woody, and slightly sweet.