Demoz Articles
BookMark this Page    Tell Your Friend    Contact Us
Categories
 Arts & Entertainment

 Business

 Communications

 Computers

 Disease & Illness

 Fashion

 Finance

 Food & Beverage

 Health & Fitness

 Home & Family

 Internet Business

 Politics

 Product Reviews

 Recreation & Sports

 Reference & Education

 Self Improvement

 Society

 Travel & Leisure

 Vehicles

 Writing & Speaking

Useful Links
  Free Visa Guide

  Study Abroad

  UK Immigration

  Canada Immigration

  Australia Immigration

  Work Permits

  Arabic Girls

  Night Life of Dubai

  Jobs in Dubai

  Jobs in UK

  Search Universities

  Girls Fashion

  Bollywood Models

  UK Poetry and Jokes

  UK Hot Girls

Home / Home And Family / A Litter Box Of Glass

A Litter Box of Glass

Resource for the latest of A Litter Box of Glass. It contains latest useful information of A Litter Box of Glass along with detail of A Litter Box of Glass, also get the latest articles of A Litter Box of Glass

A Litter Box of Glass

  Viewed : 51Mail to a FriendRating :    Rate it

Copyright 2006 John Young

One major problem you encounter as a cat owner involves your cat’s use (or non-use) of her litter box.

This is probably one of the most frustrating issues that arise in caring for your new cat. You buy a litter box, often an expensive one, fill it with good quality litter, and then find your cat defecating or urinating somewhere else in the house. Even more frustrating is when you discover that your cat “does her business” near the litter box, but not in it.

You have, of course, taken your cat to the vet who has pronounced her “healthy”. So, you’ve ruled out any physical ailment. You’ve changed the litter; you’ve cleaned the box. You’ve made sure no other cat is going in her box.

And yet, she’s still doing it – you still have problems:

• your cat is going somewhere else in the house

• your cat is going next to the litter box

• your cat is going half in and half out

The last possibility can often be solved by getting a larger box: something resembling a tub that your cat can still get into and out of without too much trouble but will confine the scat (not the cat) to the tub.

But the first two difficulties often remain.

THE INVISIBLE CULPRIT

What could be the problem? I’d like to pose a possible answer in one word: PLASTIC.

Most litter boxes, no matter how elaborate or expensive, are made of one plastic or another.

Plastics are polymers…huge molecules made by chemically “stringing together” smaller molecular units. Sometimes the units are all identical, sometimes they vary in composition and recur with some regularity. However all plastics are “organic” compounds.

In case you’ve forgotten your high school chemistry, organic compounds are primarily made up of Carbon and Hydrogen, sometimes with other elements such as Nitrogen, Phosphorous or Sulfur thrown in.

The plastics used in constructing most cheap cat litter boxes are relatively flexible – they can be easily bent. When you pick yours up to clean it, you’ll find it bending as you carry it out the door. It’s composed of a flexible plastic.

Flexible plastics are made that way by the addition of what’s termed “plasticizers”. Plasticizers are small organic molecules, usually phthalate esters that are added to the polymer to increase its flexibility.

Other litter boxes, particularly the self cleaning ones, are not so flexible. Since they are self cleaning, they are not designed to be picked up, and are generally constructed of several smaller, harder, plastic parts.

Hard plastics are formed in molds (forms into which the plastic is poured, where it hardens and takes shape). The molds are first coated with a “mold release” agent to enable the removal of the plastic part from the mold – otherwise it would stick to it and stay there.

Both materials – the plasticizer and the mold release agent– remain as a residue on (or in) the plastic. And both materials can “outgas”, that is, be released into the air, immediately after your litter box has been manufactured, and, in the cases of flexible plastics, from then on.

THEY ARE THERE…

So, if you’ve tried everything to induce your cat to “go” in her litter box and nothing has worked, could it be that your cat is sensitive to the plasticizers or the mold release agents used in the manufacture of her litter box? Even though you can’t smell anything, maybe your cat can.

Plastic is basically an unnatural material. It wasn’t found in nature before Man arrived and started making disposable food containers and litter boxes, and it wasn’t a factor in the evolution of cats.

Maybe your cat is sensitive to it, and is making you aware of that fact by defecating somewhere else, far from this source of annoyance. Or maybe the plastic is triggering some unnatural behavior in your cat, causing her to defecate half in and half out.

DON'T TELL YOUR GUESTS…

Try changing the material of the litter box. Try a glass litter box.

But, you say, there aren’t any glass litter boxes for sale! Where can I get one?

I went to glass some time ago by converting a shallow baking dish into a litter box. My wife used it for baking scalloped potatoes, and I unwittingly grabbed it for a different use, much to her…uh…displeasure.

Granted, a baking dish is shallow and the litter is easily thrown out by a digging cat, but I place newspaper under it (not a plastic mat), to catch the thrown litter. I’ve owned two cats in succession now, and neither has had a problem “doing their deed” somewhere else.

So try it. Of course it goes without saying that once you convert the baking dish into a litter box, it’s the end of using it to cook scalloped potatoes for your guests when they come over for dinner.

Or, at least, it’s a good idea that, after they’ve eaten, to keep that fact to yourself.

Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com

John Young is a writer and a cat lover, having owned one cat or another since he was four, and that was over 57 years ago. He's written a new ebook, "Your New Cat's First 24 Hours" www.yourcatsecrets.com and has packed into it every shred of information he could find to help you introduce your new cat to your household and care for her from then on. Please check it out and sign up for his free newsletter, "Your Cat's 9 Secrets".

Tell Your Friend :


  Resource for A Litter Box of Glass
© 2006-2008 DmozArticles : Latest collection of articles of all categories. All material on this site is copyrighted by its respective owner. If you see your copyright violated here, please Contact us Free Articles