O.K. We all know about scooping litter boxes, multiple litter boxes, types of litter.
What I want to know is this: In what do you collect the scooped poop?
I save all the flimsy produce bags from the grocery store, bread bags, etc. Know not to use plastic lettuce bags as they have holes through which grains of litter may escape.
I also use brown paper lunch bags.
The young kittens-transitioning-to-cats have three litter pans. Today I reduced this number by one as they rarely use the one on the main level of the house. I scoop these twice a day, morning and evening.
The primary reason for this query is my old lady cat Mist, living in her senior housing quarters in my study.
She is a diabetic controlled with diet. Her last glucose test was a respectable 166. She does urinate frequently. So I'm scooping multiple times a day in addition to morning and evening. It's bulky to wrap in a paper towel, then throw in the trash. I hate to use a "fresh" brown paper lunch bag several times a day.
So, fellow catophiles, once you scoop - what next?
What I want to know is this: In what do you collect the scooped poop?
I save all the flimsy produce bags from the grocery store, bread bags, etc. Know not to use plastic lettuce bags as they have holes through which grains of litter may escape.
I also use brown paper lunch bags.
The young kittens-transitioning-to-cats have three litter pans. Today I reduced this number by one as they rarely use the one on the main level of the house. I scoop these twice a day, morning and evening.
The primary reason for this query is my old lady cat Mist, living in her senior housing quarters in my study.
She is a diabetic controlled with diet. Her last glucose test was a respectable 166. She does urinate frequently. So I'm scooping multiple times a day in addition to morning and evening. It's bulky to wrap in a paper towel, then throw in the trash. I hate to use a "fresh" brown paper lunch bag several times a day.
So, fellow catophiles, once you scoop - what next?