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the official 'pets and drugs' thread

I've never seen the point in getting animals high purposefully, at least not blowing smoke at them, but a lot of my friends have various pets, and getting high in the same room as them for any length of time, and they'll start to react.

Noticeably my mate's Westie terrier. Sat in the room with us smoking yesterday, after an hour or so, she'd be wandering round the room, licking at people and snuffling, rolling over and just cuddling up to you a lot more than normal. It's nice, I find it easier to relate to animals when I'm stoned, and even easier when they are too.

My ex-gf had a cat who'd also get stoned, but it freaked me out a little. Cats tend to hate me, more so when I'm wasted.
 
Hahaha, The other day I went outside to smoke a Bowl, and as i was just about to spark it, i noticed my cat rubbing up against his Catnip plant. So I picked sum leaves off his plant and brought them over to where i was sitting. It was classic, Me gettin high with my cat .
 
paradoxcycle said:
Originally posted by Synto
I never gave him drugs, other than the marijuana


That was my point. I consider cannabis a drug.

Well, I didn't know any other way to interpret the behavior he was showing, other than to assume he wanted the smoke blown his way. When we started smoking he would come around, and only then. He bit at the clouds of smoke when he saw it anywhere. He barked when enough people hit it and didn't blow it his way. He jumped all over us, trying to get to the pipe. When he got enough, he was happy and everyone could tell. It's not like I was forcefully holding him down and making him rip a bong or anything...
 
This was years ago, when I was young and stupid, but I gave a cat a quarter hit of acid, it started getting agitated, so I put it outside. It ran off, and I never saw it again. I also had a friend who had a white rat he would put in a tube from a hampster cage, blow smoke in it, and sit a book on top. The rat would come to you when you started smoking.
 
IT has been proven for dogs anyway that they learn certain things give them different sensations. Not long ago it was reported that dogs in Queensland Australia would lick only certain toads that secreated an enzime to get themselves drugged. They studied the behavour of most pet dogs to see if they understood what they where doing. They found the dogs would learn to only lick enough to get a little drugged and rarelly overdoesed (wich would induce fitting, i.e running around in circles uncontrollably).

So there you go, they can learn cirtain things make them feel good and they seek it out willinglly.

Having said that I don't agree with blowing smoke in pets faces or drugging them intentianally
 
Originally posted by Phonic
...they can learn cirtain things make them feel good and they seek it out willinglly.

which completely and conveniently ignores any discussion of whether these things are damaging to the animal...

dude, my dog totally wants it - it must be ok

:\

alasdair
 
andruejaysin said:
This was years ago, when I was young and stupid, but I gave a cat a quarter hit of acid, it started getting agitated, so I put it outside. It ran off, and I never saw it again.

That really makes me sad reading that. Granted you said it was years ago when you were young and stupid, but what the fuck were you thinking?
 
I don't know what I was thinking, I still feel bad about it. We were tripping on acid at the time, not that it's any excuse.
 
alasdairm said:
Originally posted by Phonic
...they can learn cirtain things make them feel good and they seek it out willinglly.

which completely and conveniently ignores any discussion of whether these things are damaging to the animal...

dude, my dog totally wants it - it must be ok

:\

alasdair

If you read my post carfully I never said it was ok or safe. I was simply stating that dogs DO learn that certain substances give them effects that they later try to seek out. It was simply in response to a few people saying that the dogs don't know what is happening.:D
 
^Its a different matter entirely if you force it on your pets...if they are out in the wild and pick it up for themselves, then hey, more power to them.

The difference is "choice". Forcing a drug on a pet is no different to going to a school yard, holding some 10 y/o kid down and mainlining some skag into him.
 
Well that's the same way I see it too, but now some have said pot smoke is damaging to dogs. I'm not disputing that, but I haven't seen any ill effects in my dog from it, and he's been "puffin with us" for a long while. :) Maybe it's not noticeable. I'm no vet.

I think people are posing the question "What if the drug the pet picks up on himself (ie: weed smoke) is harmful to the animal"? Is it still alright to allow the animal near it when we know the difference and they don't? Yeah, it is their choice to be doing something harmful to them just like it's our choice with our bodies, but the difference is that they lack the intelligence to be able to distinguish the difference between harmful and not harmful. Kinda like how they'll eat a whole bag of chocolate and end up with all 4's in the air.
 
my friend has a book on different animals and how each of them like to get high..... the only difference is that humans can actually control their addictions...
 
Originally posted by Synto
...but the difference is that they lack the intelligence to be able to distinguish the difference between harmful and not harmful.

indeed.

alasdair
 
Tales of pets on drugs

One of my good friends used to have a little white dog. I don't know what it was, but it was about the size of a Yorkie (super-small). There was a night where we were all geting pilled out on X and Xanax and smoking tons of weed when suddenly we were looking for the two bars (2 mg a piece, of course) that we left somewhere. Almost like out of some sort of movie, we look over and see the dog munching away on something and we rush over only to find little bits of xanax on the carpet. We tried to open his mouth and make him cough it up, but it was too late - the pills were down his gullet. Not knowing what to do, we just kept chilling, seeing as how we were mad fucked up on xanax plus rolling balls to the walls.

Soon enough, we started to notice the dog acting funny. The first thing we noticed him do was walk straight into the corner of a wall and hit his head. He fell backwards on his bottom and sort of sat there for about thirty seconds. We didn't know if he was awake or not, but then he got right up, stared at the corner, and did it again! After that he stumbled around like crazy for about thirty minutes before passing out on the ground. We wanted to make sure he was okay without getting any of the authorities involved, so we took turns keping our hands on his abdomen just to make sure he was still breathing. He slept for 3 straight days!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! My friend doesn't have a job, so he was able to keep a responsible eye on him. When the dog finally awoke, the first thing he did was walk very slowly over to his food dish and eat about twice his weight in kibbles and bits. Then he drank his entire bowl of water. Then I took him out for a walk so that he could go potty. I have never seen a dog that small shit so much in my entire life or pee so many times. He was a little bit lethargic for about a week after that, but then he was fine. Imagine that: two bars in a dog that could have weighed no more than 10 pounds! What a trooper! %)
 
well, at least you weren't one of those big idiots that goes and gets your pets high for fun...those people piss me the fuck off...

But it's surprising how resiliant animals can be...glad to hear the pup's ok-3 straight days is a lot, damn...
 
Small pets are especially susceptible to the effects of any accidently injested drugs or medications that might be left out unsupervised. But even worse, my wife accidentally fed our little 17 lbs french bulldog a 10 mg adderall. In my wife's defense, the dog was taking an antibiotic that looked almost exactly like the adderall. OMG, that poor little guy was running around in circles for hours and was completely unresponsive to voice commands. I thought maybe the dog had suffered some physical trama to his head/brain until I went to count out the adderall and realized one was missing.
 
I think my dog might get an inadvertant buzz when he hangs out in my room and I'm getting high.

He doesn't do anything crazy though, just gets real sleepy and chills out for a while.

Not sure if I'm going to read this thread when it has more replies. Stories about animals getting messed up don't appeal to me. Poor pets, they don't know what they're getting.
 
My friend had a pet pig that liked to get drunk. If you left a can of beer within reach of that pig, it would tip it so it could drink what spilled.
 
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