Every year, thousands of dogs and cats become sick after eating discarded cannabis roaches left on the ground. What feels like nothing to us can leave them trembling, paralyzed, or blind for up to 24 hours.
KindHigh was created to stop this — by raising awareness, changing habits, and protecting pets through kindness and design.
Pippa was only five months old when she found part of a discarded cannabis roach in our neighbourhood. Within minutes, she couldn’t walk or see. Watching her tiny body tremble and then become motionless was heartbreaking — and it was preventable.
She recovered, but the experience changed everything. KindHigh was born from her story, so no other pet has to go through what she did.
Veterinarians across Canada are seeing a sharp rise in cannabis poisonings since legalization. Most cases come from roaches dropped outdoors — often near trails, beaches, and parks.
This isn’t about judgment — it’s about awareness. When people understand the harm, they want to do better.
Cannabis ingestion is now one of the top poisoning causes for dogs in urban areas.
What Cannabis Poisoning Looks Like in Dogs
It happens fast — and it’s entirely preventable.
Many dogs recover with care — but every incident is preventable.
This problem is growing, but it’s one we can solve — together. Every act of kindness protects another pet.
KindHigh began as one small act of awareness — but it’s grown into something much bigger.
Beyond cannabis disposal, we’re creating a space where dog parents can feel calm, confident, and connected through simple tools, humour, and heart.
From Safety Packs and Pup Pocket Cards™ to Kind High Kids™ and our Conscious Dog Parent Movement, we’re building a kinder world for pets — and for the people who love them.
When you buy from KindHigh, you’re doing more than supporting a small local brand — you’re joining a movement to protect pets everywhere.
Right now, all awareness gear is sold at cost — no profit, just passion — to help spread this life-saving message.
As the movement grows, proceeds will go toward educational outreach, awareness materials, and free safe-disposal tins shared with local communities and vet clinics.