endlesseulogy
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Dec 14, 2003
- Messages
- 2,831
citronella oil is a well known dog deterant.
Do you have a source for this? Both MDMA and methamphetamine are odorless if 100% pure - hence to the best of my knowledge, drug dogs are trained to detect the common impurities in each.mepat1111 said:Most dogs aren't trained to smell MDMA ayjay - there are some, but not many. The majority of people caught with drugs at raves and dance parties (ie. it's unlikely that there will be much weed around) are caught with meth, meth is very smelly (even a human can usually smell it through the bag), where as MDMA has a much weaker scent.
mepat1111 said:99 times out of 100 I do, however this is the first contradiction I've heard to what she said, and until now I had no reason to doubt it. However I would believe the members of this forum over her! Now that you mention it, she did once tell me how Red Mitsubishis would automatically kill you if you dropped even a half!
Nah it was probably all the ground up glass in them causing cuts in people's stomache Nah she didn't even bother with any of the classic myths, it was just the old 'they're bad pills, they'll kill you' type of thing. (I didn't believe a word she said, I'm not that gullible )hoptis said:Did she say whether it was from the heroin or the rat poison in those pills?
Just for further reference, on washing meth:
quick washing meth Q
Washing amphetamine
And on sniffer dogs and what they detect
Sniffer Dogs - What they actually find! (Sydney Morning Herald)
Concealing Pills From Dogs
Sniffer Dogs at upcoming rave
Denny sniffs out 65 clubbers
Thirteen Chapel St clubbers were busted for drugs after the latest police sniffer dog operation.
Police and the canine cop, Denny, searched 65 people leaving venues in the Chapel St district about 6am on Sunday, June 17.
Amphetamines, ecstasy and marijuana were found, with 11 people charged with possession and two for trafficking.
"It wasn't a significant bust, but it's a bit of a wake-up call to people who go to these venues," Det Sen-Sgt John Pattison said.
Police declined to name the clubs where they caught the offenders.
In August last year, police made eight arrests using the sniffer dog and will run a similar operation in the coming months.
But Chapel St trader Penny Wilson said drugs were not Chapel St's biggest problem.
"They use party drugs like ecstasy, they don't leave any syringes in the streets," Ms Wilson said.
"They should look after the traffic more ... they'd probably get more people if they went after drink drivers."