Can a carbon filter keep drug dogs from smelling it?

spandy

Well-Known Member
Please don't spread false information. You CANNOT mask a smell from a dog. They will smell right through it. Dogs can smell in layers. If you put rotten eggs in a bag with coffee, dog shit, pussy farts, a rotting finger, and some pot the dog will smell rotten eggs, coffee, dog shit, pussy farts, rotting flesh AND your pot.
Having friends in the narc/k9 business, I can attest that this is 100% true.

You can deceive a humans nose easily, but a dog is a different story.
 

JSB99

Well-Known Member
Having friends in the narc/k9 business, I can attest that this is 100% true.

You can deceive a humans nose easily, but a dog is a different story.
Then you probably have info on how well they perform with other dogs present. Would you care to share your thoughts?
 

mcgravity

Active Member
actuly thers toways to find out ,

do endless amounts of research on how a sniffer dog is trained , get your self a dog as a puppy then then put all your reseach into the dog..

or find out were a police dog handler lives pinch the dog take it near your stash and whisper in its ear ... "find your toy son" "or girl"

no matter were i stashed/grew my weed even if i thought it was unfindalbe , the last thing i wanna be seeing is a sniffer dog running around my house or garden
 

spandy

Well-Known Member
Then you probably have info on how well they perform with other dogs present. Would you care to share your thoughts?
That I don't know. They are friends, but I keep their profession out of our daily conversations. They know I have a med card and they don't agree with medical laws as they are drug warriors through and through, but they are still good friends.

Keep your enemies close.......
 

JSB99

Well-Known Member
That I don't know. They are friends, but I keep their profession out of our daily conversations. They know I have a med card and they don't agree with medical laws as they are drug warriors through and through, but they are still good friends.

Keep your enemies close.......
I could not even imagine the endless debates you must have with your friends over this topic...especially if they poison themselves with alcohol ;)
 

spandy

Well-Known Member
Sad thing is, is they are both drinkers. Like I said, we simply do not talk about it.

We have great history together as kids and I see no reason to toss the good aside just because of a few bad things.

No one is perfect, but I still think what they do is fucked up.
 

mcgravity

Active Member
been reading some other threds on other site a few ppl have said dogs find it real hard to sniff threw vasaleen
 

mcgravity

Active Member
There is NOTHING that will immunize an area from the approach of a drug-detection dog. However, there ARE certain chemicals that may interfere with the dog's perception of smell. One is cayenne pepper. Another is ammonia and camphor. A third is Citronella oil.

Cayenne pepper is too spicy and irritates a dog's nose, thus persuading him against trying harder to perform any decent detection. Ammonia is another strong chemical and is actually used alongside Camphor as a method of halting a pursuing police tracking dog because it is too powerful for the dog to continue tracking. Explanation: Tracking dogs track people through the miniscule secretions of ammonia the human body releases. Overloading a dog's senses with ammonia is roughly comparable to dropping a room full of people directly on top of a tracking dog without notice. Citronella oil is a common ingredient in many insect repellants and obediance collars. This smell is also incredibly unenjoyable for a pooch if held in concentration.

All in all, there is ZERO chance of completely removing the threat of a drug dog's powerful nose, but there are many actions when, combined together, can greatly reduce one's chances of being discovered by a dog. I don't condone relying on this to think you have the system beat because nothing can be completely fool-proof. Best air on the side of caution. However, it doesn't hurt to keep a small bit of ammonia or citronella (or ammonia AND citronella...use your imaginations
) in the bottom of a water bottle easily accessible in a vehicle in case the situation may call for it.

something i pinched off another site
 

irieie

Well-Known Member
There is NOTHING that will immunize an area from the approach of a drug-detection dog. However, there ARE certain chemicals that may interfere with the dog's perception of smell. One is cayenne pepper. Another is ammonia and camphor. A third is Citronella oil.

Cayenne pepper is too spicy and irritates a dog's nose, thus persuading him against trying harder to perform any decent detection. Ammonia is another strong chemical and is actually used alongside Camphor as a method of halting a pursuing police tracking dog because it is too powerful for the dog to continue tracking. Explanation: Tracking dogs track people through the miniscule secretions of ammonia the human body releases. Overloading a dog's senses with ammonia is roughly comparable to dropping a room full of people directly on top of a tracking dog without notice. Citronella oil is a common ingredient in many insect repellants and obediance collars. This smell is also incredibly unenjoyable for a pooch if held in concentration.

All in all, there is ZERO chance of completely removing the threat of a drug dog's powerful nose, but there are many actions when, combined together, can greatly reduce one's chances of being discovered by a dog. I don't condone relying on this to think you have the system beat because nothing can be completely fool-proof. Best air on the side of caution. However, it doesn't hurt to keep a small bit of ammonia or citronella (or ammonia AND citronella...use your imaginations
) in the bottom of a water bottle easily accessible in a vehicle in case the situation may call for it.

something i pinched off another site
those are all great ways to mess with the dogs nose. but one should be very careful when implementing one of these because police officers are aware of all of this info and look for these things. when using one of these methods, it is essential that it looks ordinary and is not obviously there to fuck with their dog.
 

spandy

Well-Known Member
Cars that smell like fabric sheets or air freshners or like things that don't belong get searched everytime. Cops aren't stupid people. Just because they can't smell your stash doesn't mean that they aren't aware that cover up scents are present.

If you can beat the cop, you won't have to worry about the dog. Stick it in a mason jar and the smell is gone. Now to beat the dog, you can't contaminate the mason jar, and you only have a limited amount of time before the smell permeates the jar. Dogs can't smell through things, but they don't have to because odors permeate virtually anything within time, usually a short time to. I've heard many times that vacuum sealed bags that didn't get any contaminates on the out side of the bags are good for an hour at best, and then the dog can smell it. But from a humans nose you have a longer time period.

Its the microscopic dust that the dog smells. Touch your stash and then touch your door handle of your car, and hours later that dog will still alert.

Used to do all sorts of things before I got my card, most were a waste of time.
 

irieie

Well-Known Member
Cars that smell like fabric sheets or air freshners or like things that don't belong get searched everytime. Cops aren't stupid people. Just because they can't smell your stash doesn't mean that they aren't aware that cover up scents are present.

If you can beat the cop, you won't have to worry about the dog. Stick it in a mason jar and the smell is gone. Now to beat the dog, you can't contaminate the mason jar, and you only have a limited amount of time before the smell permeates the jar. Dogs can't smell through things, but they don't have to because odors permeate virtually anything within time, usually a short time to. I've heard many times that vacuum sealed bags that didn't get any contaminates on the out side of the bags are good for an hour at best, and then the dog can smell it. But from a humans nose you have a longer time period.

Its the microscopic dust that the dog smells. Touch your stash and then touch your door handle of your car, and hours later that dog will still alert.

Used to do all sorts of things before I got my card, most were a waste of time.
you summed it all up perfectly.
 

MrMoores

Well-Known Member
if theres somethin there an the dogs are out your gettin nikt forget about it do some weights an masturbate
 

DST

Well-Known Member
alsatians can smell up to 15 feet below ground from what I read when looking at buying a pup. My mate lives NEXT DOOR to a dog handler, and the dogs are kenelled at the house. He doesn't grow, but smokes a lot and has never had any problems. I guess the Dogs are only going to react if they are told to find something.

Are there even dogs kept at this police station? If only growing one plant, inside a tent or something with a carboin filter and exhausting into the attic, I think it is a fairly safe bet. Espceially if he is an old guy who is not going to attract much attention. Good luck to him and I hope he gets his meds!!!

Peace, DST
 

spandy

Well-Known Member
alsatians can smell up to 15 feet below ground
Dogs can't smell through anything, smells permeate, not that you said that but so many are unsure about what a dogs nose can actually do. What the dog can do is pick up the permeation from an object they are trained to smell that is buried 15 feet. They can't lift the smell of an object from 15 feet under ground and smell it, the smell is at the surface.

And you could of just called it a German Shepard so everyone knew what dog you were talking about, lol. Thats right boys and girls, the cops use these the most often because of their great noses. Be scared, be very scared, lol.
 

IAm5toned

Well-Known Member
agreed but not all cops are very competent. check out more of those barry cooper videos i learned a lot from them. the best way to evade cops IMHO is to try to anticipate how they are gonna think. i think it is easier to fool the k9's handler than the dog.
bingo.......
 
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