Uhhh, it will smell if you don't change the water and it wouldn't smell as good as bleach, either. Not that bleach is all that pleasant to smell, but it's a heck of a lot better then a dirty fishbowl. Bleach would kill a fish, by the way. As would chlorine. Does your fish's bowl smell like bleach?
Yes, however, would not recommend using it in the cage every time you clean it (preferably once a week). It is good to use it about once a month. What you do is you mix a good amount of dish soap (if using a fish tank like me) and then you add 1 and a half CAPS of bleach. Not cups... when you are done rinsing it and sponging it, I would recommend you rinse thoroughly until all of the smell of bleach is gone. If using a cage, do the same steps but i would recommend using about only one CAP of bleach. And of course rinsing thoroughly until the smell is gone. Hope this helps:)
Yes, bleach kills...well...anything. So bleach would definitely kill gnats. As a matter of fact, we have a gnat problem right now >.< and we are spraying bleach on them to kill them. Hope this helped.
When washing bleach out of you hair you should do it just like you would when washing out shampoo. I would tell you that you should go to a salon to get it done.
by obtaining bleach
No they do not. All chemicals smell much more harsh and stronger to them, and it is not good for them to be around the strong smells. It can hurt their noses too. If they would ever consume a chemical like this, you'd need to take them to a vet immediately. My cat will eat anything it can get its paws on, and it once took in some bleach one time, and he almost died. Also anything like chocolate, butter, salt, or grapes and raisins are toxic as well.Another AnswerThe above answer isn't entirely correct. In fact, most cats are attracted to the smell of ammonia. Ammonia is often present in bleach and other household cleaners - along with a fatal concoction of other strong chemicals. This is because ammonia is present in a cat's urine, which cats use to mark out territory. Other cats can get a wealth of information about another just by smelling another cat's urine.Because of this, it is vital to keep bleach and other chemicals in a secure place where cats cannot reach, as even a tiny amount of bleach ingested can easily kill a cat.
...Bleach.
If you want the water to be more than hot enough to activate the bleach, then boil the water first. Boiling bleach is not advised, because that would produce deadly chlorine gas.
Bleach or vinegar would probably work.
Oil that has somehow gotten onto the manifold of the engine will produce this smell. Any oil leak in and around the engine will produce this.
None. This solution would not produce an acid.
Flowers perfume candles campfire markers bleach gasoline
If the burn is bad enough you can smell a difference. It would have to a 2nd or 3rd degree burn though.
I would say that you HEAR a fart first if its LOUD enough. if not loud enough..you will definitely smell it first. It just depends on your skill of farting. :)
Who would know that?
It would fizz and smell because of microbial growth. The soup is spoiling. Yeast and some bacteria produce gas as waste products of their metabolism.
Cage cleaning needed? Definitely cage cleaning. Wipe your snake with a damp warm rag in case he slithered through his feces as that would cause the smell to stay with him. Check him for mites or ticks as these too would cause a smell to eminate from him. I found that you can use a cap a cap only of bleach and hot as water as you can stand to clean his cage safely. Wait 10-20 minutes or until you can no longer smell the bleach to put him back into his cage. If you are nervous about bleach than I find that apple cider vinegar and hot water is very good an harmless, to your pet snake.
You cannot smell nuclear radiation, nor detect it with any of your senses directly. However if the nuclear radiation was intense enough (several thousand REM/hour) it is possible that it might ionize the air enough to produce enough ozone that you could smell the ozone (which has a very acrid sour smell). But if it is this intense, not long after you first smelled the ozone you would have already accumulated a dose high enough to have severe radiation poisoning and you could be so sick that you could no longer stand and try to leave the irradiated area. If you did get out you would need intensive care in a well equipped modern hospital to have even a 30% chance of surviving, without hospitalization you would die in no more than a month in indescribable agony.