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Elephants On Speed

I've heard of elephants being given LSD, apparently in an attempt to counteract elephant craziness. Not speed though.
 
I've heard of elephants being given LSD, apparently in an attempt to counteract elephant craziness. Not speed though.

I wonder how much it would cost to get an elephant stoned? ... only in theory of course, I don't want the authorities to come around .. here's an elephant getting pissed ...

 
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Once while playing Dungeons and Dragons (sad, I know) we did manage to escape one particularly nasty situation by putting a haste spell and an enlarge spell on an elephant and thus trampling the evil monster to death. It was the end of play for the night , though, as we then couldn't stop giggling at the thought of a hasty oversized elephant and what it might do after the trampling.

Well, at least we weren't out vandalising the neighbourhood.
 
Not on speed but getting hemp oil. I reckon hash cookies would work better.

This year has been a difficult time for Fredzia, a young female African elephant at Warsaw Zoo in the Polish capital.

The zoo's four elephants became three in March, following the death of Erna, the largest female and elder of the herd. Erna's death left Fredzia in mourning, putting her under stress. Zoo keepers noticed an immediate change in Frezia's behaviour, as she attempted to make sense of life without Erna.

"Fredzia reacted strangely when she saw Erna's body. She was really excited," Dr Agnieszka Czujkowska, head of the zoo's Animal Rehabilitation Department, told the BBC. "But you could see that she was also grieving actually, she was also depressed."

Since then, zoo keepers say Fredzia has displayed signs of stress, as she struggles to establish a new relationship with her female companion, Buba. It can take months or even years for elephants to cope with the loss of an elder and restore a sense of harmony within the herd.

"This is a huge game-changer in every elephant group. Elephants might have behavioural problems when the structure of a group changes," Dr Czujkowska said.

While distressing for Fredzia, this emotional turmoil has presented Warsaw Zoo with an opportunity to test an experimental new treatment. Dr Czujkowska and her colleagues have launched a project to check whether cannabis-extract oil will reduce anxiety in the zoo's animals. Cannabidiol, also known as CBD oil, is derived from a cannabis plant compound.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-53907689
 
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