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#1
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Cat Pan Liners - what's your take?
Do you use litter pan liners? I prefer to use them and like the kind that
fit entirely over the pan (like a garbage bag). Those that I can turn inside out so the litter and 'deposits' fall inside and dump every week (yes, I scoop and replenish litter daily). But I know some people who prefer to go lining-less and after regular scooping just wash the pan out every week. I'm afraid I'm much too lazy a cleaner to do that. If you use pan liners, what is your preference? If you don't, why would you rather not? I should probably mention I have only a single sink in the kitchen and Persia's litter pan is bigger than the sink! Even with the liners, in the summer I take it outside and hose it off. In the winter they block off the external faucets with some sort of insulated cover. So I find the liners to be an absolute necessity. Jill |
#2
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I use liners, but I don't stick to only one brand. I get whichever
jumbo liners the store I happen to be at happens to have. I have found that layers of newspaper stuck under the liner helps sop up any leaks that may occur and makes it much easier to clean the box. I use regular litter, however, not the clumpable kind. With four cats, the clumping litter is just way too expensive. dragon |
#3
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"jmcquown" wrote in message
news Do you use litter pan liners? I prefer to use them and like the kind that fit entirely over the pan (like a garbage bag). Those that I can turn inside out so the litter and 'deposits' fall inside and dump every week (yes, I scoop and replenish litter daily). But I know some people who prefer to go lining-less and after regular scooping just wash the pan out every week. I'm afraid I'm much too lazy a cleaner to do that. If you use pan liners, what is your preference? If you don't, why would you rather not? I should probably mention I have only a single sink in the kitchen and Persia's litter pan is bigger than the sink! Even with the liners, in the summer I take it outside and hose it off. In the winter they block off the external faucets with some sort of insulated cover. So I find the liners to be an absolute necessity. Jill I don't use them simply because I find they tear and then aren't any use and just get in the way. Using the scoop causes the tears as well as kitty claws (all of my cats are enthusiastic diggers). We can use the hose outside year-round, so I just take them outside once a week with a scrub brush and some "Mr. Clean" and give them a good scrubbing using a hose to wash them off. This is really convenient for me since we keep the litter boxes in our attached garage, which has a kitty door in the door that leads to the house. When it's time to clean the boxes I just "lock" the kitty door to keep the cats in the house, open up the garage door, and clean the boxes out in the drive. Hugs, CatNipped |
#4
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CatNipped wrote:
"jmcquown" wrote in message news Do you use litter pan liners? I prefer to use them and like the kind that fit entirely over the pan (like a garbage bag). Those that I can turn inside out so the litter and 'deposits' fall inside and dump every week (yes, I scoop and replenish litter daily). But I know some people who prefer to go lining-less and after regular scooping just wash the pan out every week. I'm afraid I'm much too lazy a cleaner to do that. If you use pan liners, what is your preference? If you don't, why would you rather not? I should probably mention I have only a single sink in the kitchen and Persia's litter pan is bigger than the sink! Even with the liners, in the summer I take it outside and hose it off. In the winter they block off the external faucets with some sort of insulated cover. So I find the liners to be an absolute necessity. Jill I don't use them simply because I find they tear and then aren't any use and just get in the way. Using the scoop causes the tears as well as kitty claws (all of my cats are enthusiastic diggers). We can use the hose outside year-round, so I just take them outside once a week with a scrub brush and some "Mr. Clean" and give them a good scrubbing using a hose to wash them off. This is really convenient for me since we keep the litter boxes in our attached garage, which has a kitty door in the door that leads to the house. When it's time to clean the boxes I just "lock" the kitty door to keep the cats in the house, open up the garage door, and clean the boxes out in the drive. Hugs, CatNipped You are very fortunate indeed to be able to rinse and wash the tray like that... even when it snowed? G The last brand I bought was 'Fresh Kitty' liners and they are thicker than a heavy duty lawn/leaf bag. 1.8 mil thick. The scoop doesn't tear them; Persia scratching doesn't tear them. 20 bags cost me about $1.29. I need to get to PetCo again next week; I only have a few bags left. Jill |
#5
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jmcquown wrote: Do you use litter pan liners? I prefer to use them and like the kind that fit entirely over the pan (like a garbage bag). Those that I can turn inside out so the litter and 'deposits' fall inside and dump every week (yes, I scoop and replenish litter daily). But I know some people who prefer to go lining-less and after regular scooping just wash the pan out every week. I'm afraid I'm much too lazy a cleaner to do that. If you use pan liners, what is your preference? If you don't, why would you rather not? I should probably mention I have only a single sink in the kitchen and Persia's litter pan is bigger than the sink! Even with the liners, in the summer I take it outside and hose it off. In the winter they block off the external faucets with some sort of insulated cover. So I find the liners to be an absolute necessity. Jill Jill, I used to use the large, black garbage bags (I have very large tupperware storage containers for litterboxes) and they fit over the boxes just as you described. Unfortunately, Lacey is a digger and she would tear the bags so they became useless. Now, when I change the litter (on the weekend) I use one of the disposable Clorox wipes and wipe out the box and let it dry before adding fresh litter. This has managed to keep the boxes fresh until I wash them (about once a month, maybe a little longer). Julie |
#6
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"jmcquown" wrote in message
... CatNipped wrote: "jmcquown" wrote in message news Do you use litter pan liners? I prefer to use them and like the kind that fit entirely over the pan (like a garbage bag). Those that I can turn inside out so the litter and 'deposits' fall inside and dump every week (yes, I scoop and replenish litter daily). But I know some people who prefer to go lining-less and after regular scooping just wash the pan out every week. I'm afraid I'm much too lazy a cleaner to do that. If you use pan liners, what is your preference? If you don't, why would you rather not? I should probably mention I have only a single sink in the kitchen and Persia's litter pan is bigger than the sink! Even with the liners, in the summer I take it outside and hose it off. In the winter they block off the external faucets with some sort of insulated cover. So I find the liners to be an absolute necessity. Jill I don't use them simply because I find they tear and then aren't any use and just get in the way. Using the scoop causes the tears as well as kitty claws (all of my cats are enthusiastic diggers). We can use the hose outside year-round, so I just take them outside once a week with a scrub brush and some "Mr. Clean" and give them a good scrubbing using a hose to wash them off. This is really convenient for me since we keep the litter boxes in our attached garage, which has a kitty door in the door that leads to the house. When it's time to clean the boxes I just "lock" the kitty door to keep the cats in the house, open up the garage door, and clean the boxes out in the drive. Hugs, CatNipped You are very fortunate indeed to be able to rinse and wash the tray like that... even when it snowed? G Yeah, our .0000000001 inches of snow made the going pretty tough for a whole five minutes or so! ; The last brand I bought was 'Fresh Kitty' liners and they are thicker than a heavy duty lawn/leaf bag. 1.8 mil thick. The scoop doesn't tear them; Persia scratching doesn't tear them. 20 bags cost me about $1.29. I need to get to PetCo again next week; I only have a few bags left. Jill Wow, I'm impressed, everything I've ever tried just shredded in the first 24 hours of use, but I haven't tried that brand. Then again, I have faith that my crew could most likely tear them. I guess if I clipped claws it might be different, but I have 16 sets of claws in my house that are as sharp as Samauri swords. Hugs, CatNipped |
#7
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On Thu, 30 Dec 2004 06:47:39 -0600, "jmcquown"
wrote: Do you use litter pan liners? I prefer to use them and like the kind that fit entirely over the pan (like a garbage bag). Those that I can turn inside out so the litter and 'deposits' fall inside and dump every week (yes, I scoop and replenish litter daily). But I know some people who prefer to go lining-less and after regular scooping just wash the pan out every week. I'm afraid I'm much too lazy a cleaner to do that. If you use pan liners, what is your preference? If you don't, why would you rather not? I should probably mention I have only a single sink in the kitchen and Persia's litter pan is bigger than the sink! Even with the liners, in the summer I take it outside and hose it off. In the winter they block off the external faucets with some sort of insulated cover. So I find the liners to be an absolute necessity. You don't have a bathtub or shower? It would never occur to me to use the kitchen sink. There are adaptors that replace aerators on faucets to allow connecting a garden hose to the inside faucet. While I do have a suitable utility sink, I still wash the sieve, inside of the pan, and kick rings in the pan, then scrub off the outside with of the pan with the still wet scrub brush. -- T.E.D. ) |
#8
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"dragon" wrote in message oups.com... I use liners, but I don't stick to only one brand. I get whichever jumbo liners the store I happen to be at happens to have. I have found that layers of newspaper stuck under the liner helps sop up any leaks that may occur and makes it much easier to clean the box. I use regular litter, however, not the clumpable kind. With four cats, the clumping litter is just way too expensive. dragon Newspaper! What a a good idea! I use liners too. Whatevers cheapest. I hate the clumping litter, it sticks to the scoop strainer and makes a huge mess. I scoop often and do acomplete litter change every two weeks. (Trash day.) That doesn't stop them from letting rip some aromatic symphonies from time to time. THAT I'll never understand - they eat the same foor every day - why does it stink so bad only sometimes? Yeesh! TBird ---- likes the newspaper idea! |
#9
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We use wood pellet litter, which breaks up into wood dust, well, wet
wood dust, when peed on. Earlier we used to use a few layers of newspaper on the bottom of the litter pan, but now we don't have anything but the pellets. DH is the "assigned litter pan technician", so he regularly changes the whole contents of the pan (usually when most of the pellets have turned into dust and scooping wouldn't leave much to do doo-doos in anymore) and washes the pan with a detergent containing chorine under the shower tap - which makes the kitties a bit high - the chorine, not the shower. Now with the two kitties, however, we're considering getting a "sifting litter pan" designed espesially for the wood pellet litter. It sifts through the wood dust and leaves the intact pellets, making scooping and cleaning heaps easier. Here's a link to the manufacturer's site: http://www.peewee.se/ There is an English version of the site too - click on the English flag - but the "How it works" -page doesn't seem to work there. In the Swedish version the pic (not animated) is under "Så fungerar det" and in the Finnish one under "Näin se toimii", where the pic is even animated - emptying the litter through the bottom into the second pan underneath. -- Christine in Vantaa, Finland christal63 (at) yahoo (dot) com photos: http://photos.yahoo.com/christal63 |
#10
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"CK" wrote in message ... We use wood pellet litter, which breaks up into wood dust, well, wet wood dust, when peed on. Earlier we used to use a few layers of newspaper on the bottom of the litter pan, but now we don't have anything but the pellets. DH is the "assigned litter pan technician", so he regularly changes the whole contents of the pan (usually when most of the pellets have turned into dust and scooping wouldn't leave much to do doo-doos in anymore) and washes the pan with a detergent containing chorine under the shower tap - which makes the kitties a bit high - the chorine, not the shower. Now with the two kitties, however, we're considering getting a "sifting litter pan" designed espesially for the wood pellet litter. It sifts through the wood dust and leaves the intact pellets, making scooping and cleaning heaps easier. Here's a link to the manufacturer's site: http://www.peewee.se/ There is an English version of the site too - click on the English flag - but the "How it works" -page doesn't seem to work there. In the Swedish version the pic (not animated) is under "Så fungerar det" and in the Finnish one under "Näin se toimii", where the pic is even animated - emptying the litter through the bottom into the second pan underneath. Looks interesting. We use the enclosed litter boxes, with the strainer for clumping litter. I was trying to read the Norwegian "How it works". I see an awful lot about 'kiss'ing the litter tray in there. I don't think so. -- Christine in Vantaa, Finland christal63 (at) yahoo (dot) com photos: http://photos.yahoo.com/christal63 |
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