Stoner Doggys(pets)!!

Fuzzbutter

Active Member
So since growing I've noticed something peculiar, my dog LOVES the leaves. Like...they're a legitimate treat for him and he prefers a leaf over legit food rewarding, as in he eats them. Anyone else have a stoner doggy? It's weird cause I have to watch my dog more than my cat when I'm in my grow area because he'd eat a whole plant if I didn't keep an eye on him xD. I do have a rule with my animals though, no one is allowed to blow smoke at them at all....dunno why I felt that was relevant though..but these are my stoner fur-babies!!!
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StonedPony

Well-Known Member
My cockitiel got into some ground up Widow awhile back I forgot to cover it.....she has flight ..........and is my best friend....anyways she ate a gram of pot............welp when I came in shes sitting on the floor....I pick her up and put her on the desk.....she rolls over on her side and raises one wing.........well I know what that is so I rubbed under her wing........poof asleep......I pushed her and she woke up tried to fly welp that didnt work out so I just let her sit and a couple hours later she was fine LOL
 

tet1953

Well-Known Member
I was thinking about this the other day. I saw someone blowing a little smoke toward his cat, and I remember doing it myself many years ago. But what I was thinking about was, do cats or dogs even have receptors in their bodies that can make use of the cannibinoids? If not, then it doesn't do anything does it?
 

BoomerBloomer57

Well-Known Member
Bird Seed in the day used to have the Marijuana/Hemp seeds in it. After snow melt a few seedlings would pop up under the feeders. Then the rabbits would munch em.

Dogs have the C-Receptors, mine likes it blown in his ear and will come and paw at the hand that holds the bong, pipe, j or hitter. Two in the ear and he mellows out nicely. I won't blow it in his face.
 

Leothwyn

Well-Known Member
I'm sure cats and dogs can get high... years ago a friend's dog got into some cookies and he was definitely very high. He was pretty much like StonedPony's bird a few posts back - he could barely walk (he even had trouble just standing).

Back in high school, I knew this guy who would make this clicking sound when he was going to take a bong hit, and his cat would come over and jump on his lap and sit there and let him blow smoke in its face. I know it's sort of fucked up getting animals high that way, but the cat really seemed to like it.

Speaking of animals getting high... also back in high school, I had another friend who had a black lab that loved to drink. It started out with people intentionally giving the dog some beer here and there (I know, it's a bad thing to do). Eventually, we had to be careful where we set our twelve packs of beer when we were out partying somewhere - the dog would grab unopened cans of beer, take them off to the side somewhere, and bite holes in the can and lick up the beer that streamed out... either that or he'd just knock over your opened beer and lap up the spill.
 

cruzer101

Well-Known Member
I got a golden retriever pup that's about 8 months old now, He will eat just about anything that hits the floor, leaf, buds, even rolled joints. He got some beans that just sprouted off a paper towel just the other day. You should see him drool when I make bubble. i was trimming and he got a hold of a bud about a foot long, ran with it, I got about half back when I caught him. He slept the rest of the day.





But I light up a doobie and he goes to the other side of the room. He don't like the smell.


Wiki:
"A dog is an omnivore. It can thrive on a herbivorous diet though. They may have teeth like carnivores, but they are still effective at chewing plant matter. Dogs fed on vegetarian diets tend to be healthier and live longer. I think that tells you a lot. And given the choice, dogs have been known to choose plant based over meat based dog food. So it's not like feeding a dog vegetarian means a less tasty diet. They could enjoy it more "
 

Fuzzbutter

Active Member
Dogs have the C-Receptors, mine likes it blown in his ear and will come and paw at the hand that holds the bong, pipe, j or hitter. Two in the ear and he mellows out nicely. I won't blow it in his face.
" A dogs ear is very sensitive, full of sensory nerves that help to preserve hearing. Never, blow into a dogs ear, even gently can hurt a dog. It's not the actual act of wind, but the frequency at which you blow. It's like running your fingers on a blackboard, amplified hundreds of times."

http://rulingcatsanddogs.com/dogs-trivia-facts-canine-information.htm

It's also on several vet sites, you can make your dog go deaf, that is SOOOO bad for them.
 
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