Mountaineer Adventure Park

Mountaineer Adventure Park Mountaineer Adventure Park (MAP) featuring hiking & biking trails, Disc Golf, treasure hunting & HQ for

06/07/2026

Thanks everyone who came today for our Soft Opening! 🫶

We will be open tomorrow from 12-5.

Next Saturday for the Pendleton County WV Farm Crawl 11-8.

Checkout our Map of “MAP” - Mountaineer Adventure Park
06/04/2026

Checkout our Map of “MAP” - Mountaineer Adventure Park

Getting ready for this weekend’s  Soft Opening! Sneak peak of the entrance and Hole 1. Hope you swing by to check us out...
06/02/2026

Getting ready for this weekend’s Soft Opening! Sneak peak of the entrance and Hole 1.

Hope you swing by to check us out or the following weekend for the Pendleton County WV Farm Crawl

05/31/2026

Beautiful day at     be on the   for the               at the   in the
05/31/2026

Beautiful day at be on the for the at the in the

📬 Checkout The Dahmer Post Office inspired “score card” for our treasure hunt! The Treasure hunt will be available start...
05/25/2026

📬 Checkout The Dahmer Post Office inspired “score card” for our treasure hunt! The Treasure hunt will be available starting June 13th.

05/16/2026

🥏

Oh   ! Look what we got for MTAG     !?
05/12/2026

Oh ! Look what we got for MTAG !?

Too cool not to share! The nose knows! 👃
04/23/2026

Too cool not to share! The nose knows! 👃

How Far Animals Can Detect a Scent

Human smell is nearly useless by comparison. Here is
what the animal kingdom's olfactory system actually
looks like — measured in feet and miles.

HUMAN — ~5 feet
The baseline. The average person can detect strong
odors at around 5 feet under ideal conditions. Our
olfactory receptors number around 6 million. This
is the number everything below is measured against.

CAT — ~650 feet
A domestic cat has approximately 200 million olfactory
receptors — 14 times the human count. Their sense of
smell is critical for territory marking, prey detection,
and reading social signals from other cats.

DEER — ~1,600 feet (about ⅓ mile)
White-tailed deer rely on scent as their primary
predator detection system. Their nose contains an
estimated 297 million receptors. A deer can detect
a human hunter from a third of a mile away — which
is why serious hunters hunt with the wind.

WILD BOAR — ~2,300 feet (about ½ mile)
Wild boar root and forage almost entirely by smell,
locating food buried several inches underground.
Their olfactory system is sophisticated enough to
detect odors through soil at distance.

DOG — ~1.2 miles
A dog's 300 million olfactory receptors allow them
to detect scents at concentrations 100,000 times
lower than humans can perceive. Search and rescue
dogs use this capability to locate people buried
under avalanche debris or collapsed buildings.

WOLF — ~2 miles
Wolves use their exceptional scent detection to
track prey across terrain, assess pack boundaries,
and coordinate hunts. Two miles of scent detection
range means prey has virtually no safe approach angle
downwind of a wolf.

ELEPHANT — ~12 miles
Elephants have the most olfactory receptor genes of
any mammal studied — approximately 2,000. African
elephants can detect water sources from miles away,
and elephants can smell a family member's footprints
that are hours old.

BEAR — ~19 miles
The grizzly bear has the most powerful nose of any
land mammal. With a nasal surface area 100 times
larger than a human's, bears can detect carrion
from nearly 20 miles away and track scent trails
days old.

Olfactory capabilities vary by species, individual,
wind conditions, and scent concentration.

Address

270 Dahmer Road
Franklin, WV
26807

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