T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3959.1 | recycle clay litter | TYGON::WILDE | illegal possession of a GNU | Tue Aug 28 1990 19:33 | 33 |
| good subject.
I read an article several years ago that covered the steps to clean and
recycle the clay litter. I don't remember where, but I do remember the
following steps:
1) clean out all solids. Pour the litter on a fine mesh screen tray with
sides to hold the litter. The picture showed a box-like structure mounted
on legs, bottom and sides made of screening fastened to the wood frame. The
unit appeared to be approx. 2 feet off the ground.
2) Wash the clay litter thoroughly with water, finishing up with a lemon-water
or vinegar-water rinse. Allow the litter to drain, and completely dry, in
the sun. Apparently, if you let it dry in the sun, it would become odorless
again. I always figured I'd wash the lemon-water or vinegar-water out of the
clay with plain water before drying, but maybe you don't need to.
This was supposed to make the litter reusable for the cats. and then you
simply added a little more fresh litter as you washed some away. It is
a good plan but I haven't the space and I fear my neighbors would smell the
drying litter and complain. Here in california, we have no yards to speak
of -- and I don't know how I'd take care of it during the raining season.
Of course, if it could drain, I don't suppose it would hurt to be well washed
by the rain - for a month or two until the dry season arrived. I'd simply
need enough space to hold a great deal of used litter.
I did run a little test and I do know the water wash will not noticable
dissolve Tidy cat 3. Now, all I need is an idea of what to do with it
during the rainy season - 4 cats make a lot of used litter a week.
one last point...I have no idea if the cats would use the re-cycled stuff...
and I'm hesitant...if Tabby doesn't like the litter, she will use my
waterbed...at night...while I'm in it.
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3959.2 | | CRUISE::NDC | Putiput Scottish Folds - DTN: 297-2313 | Wed Aug 29 1990 09:37 | 7 |
| There is a new kind of litter that is made from recycled paper. You
can flush this down the toilet. I saw a special for 10 bags for $15
as an introductory offer and I tried it. I wasn't really impressed.
It needed to be changed faster than the clay litter and the cats
weren't crazy about it. In our case - 8 adults and 7 kittens - it
wasn't a good alternative, but perhaps you'll have better luck.
Nancy
|
3959.3 | | CRUISE::NDC | Putiput Scottish Folds - DTN: 297-2313 | Wed Aug 29 1990 09:37 | 1 |
| Oh - that introductory offer was in cats or cat fancy.
|
3959.4 | Great for less odor too! | ICS::GERRY | Home is where the Cat is | Wed Aug 29 1990 10:04 | 5 |
| And, then there's EVERCLEAN, where you really only lift out the solids
and pee balls and flush. I don't really know how this affects the
sewerage system, but, you never have to empty the box.
|
3959.5 | | CRUISE::NDC | Putiput Scottish Folds - DTN: 297-2313 | Wed Aug 29 1990 10:19 | 4 |
| I saw a new advert. in Cats for some new types of Everclean that are
supposed to hold together very well. I may finally try this for my
crew.
N
|
3959.6 | Works Great! | ICS::GERRY | Home is where the Cat is | Wed Aug 29 1990 10:43 | 5 |
| Yup, EVERCLEAN HD....HD stands for Heavy Duty!
;-)
|
3959.7 | It makes life easy | SALEM::DILLON_M | It's never to late | Wed Aug 29 1990 13:07 | 7 |
| Becareful! One of the Everclean products can not be flushed down
the toilet. I belive it is the HD. The balls do not break up. There are
three types of Everclean, one for a one cat home, MC for more that one
cat and the HD which turns into cement.
Mike (who has never used anything but Everclean)
|
3959.8 | I use it for the boys! | ICS::GERRY | Home is where the Cat is | Wed Aug 29 1990 14:24 | 6 |
| Gee, Mike, I've been using the HD, and have still been flushing it!
Your right, though, it does make harder balls than the regular or ES
(Extra Strength) stuff.
cin
|
3959.9 | | CRUISE::NDC | Putiput Scottish Folds - DTN: 297-2313 | Wed Aug 29 1990 14:28 | 5 |
| Yes, it does say you can't flush that - but it would still be
ALOT less to throw out each week. Our poor trashpeople have to
empty the barrels one bag at a time because they're too heavy
to lift.
|
3959.10 | Instructions...what instructions! | ICS::GERRY | Home is where the Cat is | Wed Aug 29 1990 14:43 | 7 |
| Gee, you know, I never read the bottle!!! I bought the regular
EVERCLEAN the first time, and have just added different evercleans to
it. Guess I've been lucky. I have 3 gallons of HD in my trunk right
now, maybe I return it and get it replaced with ES....can you flush the
ES???
|
3959.11 | | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | set home/cat_max=infinity | Wed Aug 29 1990 18:45 | 7 |
| I would think that after you wash the used litter with water, you
should soak it with Nolvasan or some other disinfectant. Lots of
bacteria could grow on the litter if it wasn't washed thoroughly.
Then, you could use the lemon water rinse and then let dry. Might
work.
Jo
|
3959.12 | I couldn't resist! | FRAGLE::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Thu Aug 30 1990 09:39 | 1 |
| Or you could train you cat to use the great outdoors..... ;*)
|
3959.13 | Not much you can do..... | BOOVX1::MANDILE | | Thu Aug 30 1990 11:37 | 16 |
| We are lucky enough to have a safe area to dump it on
our property. The horse manure and clay litter mix
biodegrades well. I wonder if this can be considered
"clean fill? :-)
Re .12 - I can just see myself now...Pajamas, slippers
at 6:00am chasing 4 cats who have no interest in "going",
because they are outside and want to have fun.
"No Rusty, don't chase the horse!", "Pepper, get out of that
tree!", "B.K., come back to the sandlitter box, leave that
bird alone!" "No, Casey, stay in the back yard!"
"No, you two, let that bumblebee alone!"...... :-) :-) :-)
and...."Oh no, we've got fleas again!!!!!" :-)
L-
|
3959.14 | I tried re-cycling | GENRAL::BALDRIDGE | It's downhill from here | Tue Sep 04 1990 18:26 | 10 |
| Several years ago I pondered the same issue as the basenoter and tried
several re-cycling schemes, fine screen, wash with water, dry in sun,
etc., and finally concluded it was a nearly impossible task for an
individual. I think one could devise a method that would work in
volume, but I doubt it would be financially feasible.
Chuck
|
3959.15 | | WORDY::C_MILLER | | Mon Oct 01 1990 12:01 | 6 |
| I have been using a biodegradable brand called "Neat 'n Sweet" (or
something like that), which resembles pellets. It disolves in water
(when I flush it down our septic tank). Granted, when I have to change
the box once a week there is still a lot that is thrown out, but at
least I know it is biodegradable and might go a little faster in a
landfill then just sitting around for a 100 years.
|
3959.16 | | CRUISE::NDC | Putiput Scottish Folds - DTN: 297-2313 | Tue Oct 02 1990 08:36 | 4 |
| The problem I've dicovered with the biodegradable litters is that
they don't keep the odor down like the clay litters. Has anyone
else noticed this?
N
|
3959.17 | tried bio stuff | BTOVT::MUNROE_R | I'll give it a whirl! | Mon Oct 08 1990 16:35 | 5 |
| I used some of that biodegradable pellet-type litter mentioned a few
back and found it clumped together once wet and did not last very long.
As I recall, it did not smell too good, either.
--Becca
|
3959.18 | what am I missing here? | TYGON::WILDE | illegal possession of a GNU | Tue Oct 09 1990 20:30 | 10 |
| I'm certainly missing something here -- litter is clay - a natural soil...
cat poop is certainly biodegradable - that's why it smells so bad. It is,
in fact, tomorrows fertile soil. I have been looking for ways to recycle
my litter so I could reduce the amount of plastic bags/paper bags, etc. I
am using to CONTAIN the stuff for disposal, but I've never been concerned
that I was stuffing landfills with bad stuff by disposing of the litter itself.
I think that "biodegradable" stuff is a scam, folks....fer pete's sake, nuthin
is more natural than cat poop and plain old clay soil -- which is what tidy
cat is.
|
3959.19 | EVERCLEAN or clay???? | CTOAVX::COWPERTHWAIT | Sue Cow | Fri Oct 12 1990 12:42 | 12 |
| I have used EVERCLEAN HD and found that it was easy to scoop except for
the pee balls that seemed to cling to the bottom of the pan. I guess I
was expecting completely maintenance free litter (with the exception of
scooping, of course). It seems that it is still necessary to
periodically empty and scrub the pan. I have recently switched over to clay litter
which, now that I think of it, is much more of a mess because the
kittens, three of them at 5 months, throw it all over the room. The
EVERCLEAN, because it is so fine, just hid in the rug until it was
vacuumed. The clay litter makes a horrible mess. Maybe I'll teach the
kittens how to use the vacuum cleaner after each visit to the litter
box. I'll give the clay a few more weeks, perhaps, but I have a
feeling I'm going to go back to EVERCLEAN, the kind that flushes.
|
3959.20 | | CRUISE::NDC | Putiput Scottish Folds DTN:297-2313 | Mon Oct 15 1990 09:07 | 6 |
| I was delighted with the EVERCLEAN HD. It tracked less and kept the
diningroom odor free. Unfortunately, it was costing me $15/wk just for
that one box. I still had to buy clay litter for the other 5 boxes. So
we're back to clay litter only.
Sigh...
Nancy DC
|