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Cat Litter Question
Shopping for cat litter, I notice that there are two basic kinds of the non
clumping kind (the cheap kind!): regualar and scented (multi-cat). I am confused as to why it is marketed this way. wouldn't the highly scented kind be the preferable type for MOST cat owners, whether they have 1,2, or more cats? Who, especially those like me who live in an apt., would not prefer the litter that has more perfume?! I realize some people may be allergic to scented litter, and some more may just not like the scent, but I would guess these are a minority. Why is the scented litter marketed as 'multi-cat,' rather than the less scented stuff sold as 'unscented,' 'hypoallergenic' or something like that? *R* *H* -- Powered by Linux |/ 2.6.32.26-175 Fedora 12 "No spyware. No viruses. No nags." |/ 2.6.31.12-0.2 OpenSUSE 11.2 http://www.jamendo.com |/ Mutt 1.5.21 slrn0.9.9p1 Irssi 0.8.15 "Preach the gospel always; when necessary use words." St. Francis |
#2
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Cat Litter Question
On Thu, 17 Mar 2011 07:51:42 -0700, Rockinghorse Winner
wrote: Shopping for cat litter, I notice that there are two basic kinds of the non clumping kind (the cheap kind!): regualar and scented (multi-cat). I am confused as to why it is marketed this way. wouldn't the highly scented kind be the preferable type for MOST cat owners, whether they have 1,2, or more cats? Who, especially those like me who live in an apt., would not prefer the litter that has more perfume?! I realize some people may be allergic to scented litter, and some more may just not like the scent, but I would guess these are a minority. Why is the scented litter marketed as 'multi-cat,' rather than the less scented stuff sold as 'unscented,' 'hypoallergenic' or something like that? *R* *H* Some cats are allergic to the scented variety of litter, as well as some people, I suppose. Kittens especially, should not be using scented. I've been experimenting with different litters after reading that some cats might have problems with the clumping clay kinds. So far, the best litter I've used is Swheat Scoop. http://swheatscoop.com/ |
#3
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Cat Litter Question
Rockinghorse Winner wrote:
Shopping for cat litter, I notice that there are two basic kinds of the non clumping kind (the cheap kind!): regualar and scented (multi-cat). I am confused as to why it is marketed this way. wouldn't the highly scented kind be the preferable type for MOST cat owners, whether they have 1,2, or more cats? Who, especially those like me who live in an apt., would not prefer the litter that has more perfume?! I realize some people may be allergic to scented litter, and some more may just not like the scent, but I would guess these are a minority. Why is the scented litter marketed as 'multi-cat,' rather than the less scented stuff sold as 'unscented,' 'hypoallergenic' or something like that? *R* *H* Many cats don't like scented litter and will be reluctant to use it. This is one reason you may have a cat that prefers the carpet in the corner. I have to use unscented litter or I will have problems with at least one of my nine cats. Some of that scented stuff is so strong it bothers me. I can only imagine what my cats with their more developed sense of smell think of it. Terry |
#4
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Cat Litter Question
On Thu, 17 Mar 2011 16:41:00 -0500, Terry
wrote: Rockinghorse Winner wrote: Shopping for cat litter, I notice that there are two basic kinds of the non clumping kind (the cheap kind!): regualar and scented (multi-cat). I am confused as to why it is marketed this way. wouldn't the highly scented kind be the preferable type for MOST cat owners, whether they have 1,2, or more cats? Who, especially those like me who live in an apt., would not prefer the litter that has more perfume?! I realize some people may be allergic to scented litter, and some more may just not like the scent, but I would guess these are a minority. Why is the scented litter marketed as 'multi-cat,' rather than the less scented stuff sold as 'unscented,' 'hypoallergenic' or something like that? *R* *H* Many cats don't like scented litter and will be reluctant to use it. This is one reason you may have a cat that prefers the carpet in the corner. I have to use unscented litter or I will have problems with at least one of my nine cats. Some of that scented stuff is so strong it bothers me. I can only imagine what my cats with their more developed sense of smell think of it. Terry I can't figure out all the different varieties of litter, but I assume that perfumed ones are for people who don't clean the box regularly. As for Multi-Cat vs Instant De-smell vs Long Lasting, I think it's all just marketing fluff. I have two "boxes" and four cats. One is an actual litter box and I've been using the Arm and Hammer Essentials, which is a non-clay clumping litter. It isn't really as good as clay, but I've read that clay litter is bad for the environment as well as us and the cats, so I scoop more often and it works fine. The other "box" is a Litter Robot (not a Litter Maid which is crap). That does not work well with non-clay litters so I do need to use clay with that but it uses very little litter so at least it minimizes the badness. |
#5
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Cat Litter Question
The "formula" of clumpable litters is all about marketing. IMO cats
shouldn't be using scented litter. Their sense of smell is ten times stronger than ours. I can't stand scented litters, so imagine how it smells to them. Unscented only for our household. Rene |
#6
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Cat Litter Question
"Rockinghorse Winner" wrote in message ... Shopping for cat litter, I notice that there are two basic kinds of the non clumping kind (the cheap kind!): regualar and scented (multi-cat). I am confused as to why it is marketed this way. wouldn't the highly scented kind be the preferable type for MOST cat owners, whether they have 1,2, or more cats? Who, especially those like me who live in an apt., would not prefer the litter that has more perfume?! I realize some people may be allergic to scented litter, and some more may just not like the scent, but I would guess these are a minority. Why is the scented litter marketed as 'multi-cat,' rather than the less scented stuff sold as 'unscented,' 'hypoallergenic' or something like that? *R* *H* -- I can't answer your specific question, but I can tell you that I look for as little scent as possible (preferably none). Litter that is kept scooped and changed as needed should not cause odor. But think of your cats' sensitive noses--they are "right up close" to litter, and scented litter could be almost intolerable to those sensitive noses (in addition to the obvious possibility of allergies). MaryL |
#7
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Cat Litter Question
MaryL wrote:
"Rockinghorse Winner" wrote in message ... Shopping for cat litter, I notice that there are two basic kinds of the non clumping kind (the cheap kind!): regualar and scented (multi-cat). I am confused as to why it is marketed this way. wouldn't the highly scented kind be the preferable type for MOST cat owners, whether they have 1,2, or more cats? Who, especially those like me who live in an apt., would not prefer the litter that has more perfume?! I realize some people may be allergic to scented litter, and some more may just not like the scent, but I would guess these are a minority. Why is the scented litter marketed as 'multi-cat,' rather than the less scented stuff sold as 'unscented,' 'hypoallergenic' or something like that? *R* *H* -- I can't answer your specific question, but I can tell you that I look for as little scent as possible (preferably none). Litter that is kept scooped and changed as needed should not cause odor. But think of your cats' sensitive noses--they are "right up close" to litter, and scented litter could be almost intolerable to those sensitive noses (in addition to the obvious possibility of allergies). MaryL A couple of months ago, I tried a different litter. TuTu was allergic to it. She did a lot of sneezing and got a stuffed up nose. I went back to World's Best Litter and she cleared up at once. MLB |
#8
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Cat Litter Question
* It may have been the liquor talking, but
MLB wrote: MaryL wrote: "Rockinghorse Winner" wrote in message ... Shopping for cat litter, I notice that there are two basic kinds of the non clumping kind (the cheap kind!): regualar and scented (multi-cat). I am confused as to why it is marketed this way. wouldn't the highly scented kind be the preferable type for MOST cat owners, whether they have 1,2, or more cats? Who, especially those like me who live in an apt., would not prefer the litter that has more perfume?! I realize some people may be allergic to scented litter, and some more may just not like the scent, but I would guess these are a minority. Why is the scented litter marketed as 'multi-cat,' rather than the less scented stuff sold as 'unscented,' 'hypoallergenic' or something like that? *R* *H* -- I can't answer your specific question, but I can tell you that I look for as little scent as possible (preferably none). Litter that is kept scooped and changed as needed should not cause odor. But think of your cats' sensitive noses--they are "right up close" to litter, and scented litter could be almost intolerable to those sensitive noses (in addition to the obvious possibility of allergies). MaryL A couple of months ago, I tried a different litter. TuTu was allergic to it. She did a lot of sneezing and got a stuffed up nose. I went back to World's Best Litter and she cleared up at once. MLB Thanks to all for the new perspective! I'll be using the 'less scented' varieties for now on. *R* *H* -- Powered by Linux |/ 2.6.32.26-175 Fedora 12 "No spyware. No viruses. No nags." |/ 2.6.31.12-0.2 OpenSUSE 11.2 http://www.jamendo.com |/Mutt 1.5.21 slrn 0.9.9p1 Irssi 0.8.15 "Preach the gospel always; when necessary use words." St. Francis |
#9
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Cat Litter Question
On Mar 17, 10:51*am, Rockinghorse Winner
wrote: Shopping for cat litter, I notice that there are two basic kinds of the non clumping kind (the cheap kind!): regualar and scented (multi-cat). I am confused as to why it is marketed this way. wouldn't the highly scented kind be the preferable type for MOST cat owners, whether they have 1,2, or more cats? Who, especially those like me who live in an apt., would not prefer the litter that has more perfume?! I realize some people may be allergic to scented litter, and some more may just not like the scent, but I would guess these are a minority. Why is the scented litter marketed as 'multi-cat,' rather than the less scented stuff sold as 'unscented,' 'hypoallergenic' or something like that? *R* *H* -- * * * * * Powered by Linux * * * * * |/ * * * 2..6.32.26-175 Fedora 12 *"No spyware. No viruses. No nags." *|/ * * 2.6.31.12-0.2 OpenSUSE 11.2 * * * *http://www.jamendo.com* * * *|/ Mutt 1.5.21 *slrn0.9.9p1 *Irssi 0.8.15 * * * "Preach the gospel always; when necessary use words." *St. Francis * * Use sawdust. |
#10
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Cat Litter Question
On Mar 18, 11:46*pm, MLB wrote:
MaryL wrote: "Rockinghorse Winner" wrote in message ... Shopping for cat litter, I notice that there are two basic kinds of the non clumping kind (the cheap kind!): regualar and scented (multi-cat). I am confused as to why it is marketed this way. wouldn't the highly scented kind be the preferable type for MOST cat owners, whether they have 1,2, or more cats? Who, especially those like me who live in an apt., would not prefer the litter that has more perfume?! I realize some people may be allergic to scented litter, and some more may just not like the scent, but I would guess these are a minority. Why is the scented litter marketed as 'multi-cat,' rather than the less scented stuff sold as 'unscented,' 'hypoallergenic' or something like that? *R* *H* -- I can't answer your specific question, but I can tell you that I look for as little scent as possible (preferably none). *Litter that is kept scooped and changed as needed should not cause odor. *But think of your cats' sensitive noses--they are "right up close" to litter, and scented litter could be almost intolerable to those sensitive noses (in addition to the obvious possibility of allergies). MaryL A couple of months ago, I tried a different litter. *TuTu was allergic to it. *She did a lot of sneezing and got a stuffed up nose. *I went back to World's Best Litter and she cleared up at once. * MLB I'm Leary of dusty litter. I tried pine rod litter once and one cat did not understand what it was for, but neat stuff. Some cheap litters are too dusty. Greg |
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