Artificial plants can be just as dangerous as live plants


Sometimes, no matter how hard you try, you can’t always protect your pets. I found out the hard way that not only live house plants can pose a danger to your pets, but artificial plants as well.

It was Christmas, and for years she had removed tinsel, live Christmas Eve plants, live Christmas cacti, live mistletoe, and every other potentially dangerous Christmas item. I had done research on keeping my pets safe during the holiday seasons, but had never seen the dangers of artificial plants.

I write this in memory of my Maine Coon cat, Miranda. She was never one to nibble on artificial plants, so I never expected that to be the cause of her not feeling well. She was skipping meals, losing weight, not cleaning herself regularly, and supporting herself. My husband and I decided that she needed to see the vet. She was quite dehydrated, so she was kept at the clinic. At first they couldn’t find anything wrong with her, her blood tests came back good, but she still wouldn’t eat. The vet stuck an endoscope down her throat to see if anything might have lodged in her esophagus, but she found nothing.

She stayed at the clinic over Christmas and we were going to pick her up the next day. Before we went to pick her up, the vet called and asked if we had any artificial plants that he could have eaten. He had an artificial arrangement on the coffee table, but it didn’t appear to have been chewed. Miranda had coughed up a small stick that she had stuck sideways down her throat that morning. The doctor had not seen it during the endoscope procedure. He had come from the floor on the coffee table.

I was on the road to recovery! It took her a few weeks to eat again; her throat was quite sore from the stick. She seemed to be getting back to normal, but that was deceiving.

Two months after bringing her home, my husband and I took her back to the vet. I found her lying on the ground, having trouble breathing and gasping every time she took a breath. She suffered from congestive heart failure. The fluids from her made it difficult for him to breathe. She was in a lot of pain and the vet didn’t think she would survive. We made the heartbreaking decision to ease her pain.

In speaking to the vet, he felt that the earlier incident with the stick lodged in his throat was causing his heart anguish. Over time, the fluid built up until she could no longer breathe freely.

It’s so hard to know what dangers are in your house. I can’t get my Miranda back, but I can help others not to make the same mistake. Check all your plants, artificial or real, and make sure your cats or dogs don’t get hurt if they think this is something to eat or play with. It will take just a few minutes of your time, but the reward will be a happy, healthy, and confident pet!