Clumping Kitty Litter

As I keep saying, the three-pan system works great. You don't scoop. You don't grope. You don't do anything but lift, dump, lift, dump. No power. No batteries. Clean sand.

The clay, in a stomach, probably would turn to mud. If you soak the clumpy stuff clear through, it lets go, becomes goo. Probably uncomfortable on the way out...

As for the clumps sticking to the kitty's feet, nope. The sand does, though. That gets everywhere.
 
rebecca said:
If the litter is dangerous, I think the reason why you wouldn't hear a lot about it is because .... vets and owners aren't asking the right questions about why the animal has died.
I still think we'd have seen cases. You're talking about unexpected and/or unexplained death of a young animal. We get tons of these in for post-mortem. It's exactly the sort of situation where the owner often wants to know, and the vet says "well, let's just get a post-mortem and see what that says." Not always, of course, but quite often.

And yet, of all the sad little feline corpses we dissect, nada.

Rolfe.
 

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