Archangel, if you're familiar with breezes, you might also explain how such an intense odor can have arrived at the recipient's nostrils from fifty yards -- half the length of an American football field -- away.
Yep.
The thing about breezes is they can be directional and they can also carry scents towards you as well as dissipating them once the source of the odour is gone.
This is easily testable if you'd like to do an experiment:
Get a fish from your local fishmonger and place it in a airtight container in your garage, leave it there for a few days.
The fish will start to rot, but no smell should escape as it's an airtight container.
Place a small electric fan behind the container.
Have a friend or family member stand by the fish (but not blocking the fan) and have you stand in the furthest corner away from the fish.
Have your friend open the container, they'll smell the aroma almost immediately whilst you wont smell anything.
Have your friend then turn the fan on to it's lowest setting, the aroma will then drift over to you quite quickly (alternatively for natural dispersion you can leave the fan off and it will still eventually drift over there).
Then to test the ability for scents to dissipate over time, remove the rotting fish and keep the fan on.
The smell will linger for a while and then disappear, although it's possible that you will continue to smell it for a while longer due to the natural oils in the fish clinging to your nostrils.
Now given that WGBH has also said the smell started before the creature was 50 yds away, I think the benefit of the doubt can be given to my experiment with regards to distance.
Once again, I don't believe that WGBH encountered Bigfoot (mainly because it doesn't exist) however that being said, jumping through increasingly ridiculous hoops to claim that his having a Hallucination is the cause of him smelling something unpleasant is the antithesis of Ockham's Razor.
In my opinion he is more likely to have smelled himself a bear, which can be pretty damn rank in my understanding, than it is that he hallucinated the smell.
We know smells exist, we know smells can dissipate from an area once the source is removed and we know that smells can linger in ones nostrils without lingering in the area itself, therefore the claim I responded to (specifically no one else smelled it therefore it does not exist) is not exactly a realistic answer.
To Kitikaze:
Your patience in dealing with MakayaTheTroll is amazing, I'm assuming you're not actually Mahatma Ghandi right?