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Where to purchase non-clumping cat litter in bulk
Where to purchase non-clumping cat litter in bulk
Sent: 07-21- 11:35 PM
From: chris zorzi
Subject: Where to purchase non-clumping cat litter in bulk
See if there's a pet food supply store in the area that sells their store brand of litter in bulk. (The type of situation where they sell you a first bucket, and then you bring back the empty bucket to be refilled for a set price.) If they offer non-clumping litter, ask them about doing a bulk purchase of their litter in the super sack it is delivered in.
We did this for our Kitten Foster Program, although we get the clumping litter. It comes in a 3,000 lb sack and they're nice enough to deliver it to us on a pallet (it helps to have a relationship with the store so they're willing to help you) when we need more. You'll need a place to store it, and there's a bit of work involved breaking it down, but the savings are well worth it. We get ~135 filled jugs out of each super sack.
We put out a call for empty tidy cat jugs, and we fill them with a grain scoop and funnel to give to our fosters. When fosters need a refill, they only get a new jug of litter when they bring back the empty one.
Suggestion number 2: Pine Pellets. Find a horse feed/tack store and see if they sell pine pellet bedding. Same thing as the pine pellets marketed for cats, but a fraction of the price. I think we were paying $7 for a 40# bag, but that was a few years ago. Regardless, it was a fraction the cost of Feline Pine or an equivalent. And like the super sack, if you buy a pallet at a time, they might be willing to deliver.
Suggestion number 3: If there's a big box store in your area, like Target or Walmart, talk to them and ask what they do with their breakage and damaged pet products like litter and cat food. An open or damaged box/bag of litter can't be sold, but it can be donated to a rescue/shelter instead of thrown out. Same for opened/damaged boxes of food. Again, there will be some work (you'll have to send someone on a very regular basis to pick this stuff up) but it can turn into a *lot* of free food and litter.
Oh, and if you do wind up buying multiple (normal) bags of litter or pellets in large quantities, ask if they can give a discount, especially if you're planning to continue purchases going forward. When you buy stuff a pallet at a time, they're usually willing to give you a break. (The worst they can say is no, so ask!)
Hope that helps. Please let me know if you have questions.
-Chris
We put out a call for empty tidy cat jugs, and we fill them with a grain scoop and funnel to give to our fosters. When fosters need a refill, they only get a new jug of litter when they bring back the empty one.Suggestion number 2: Pine Pellets. Find a horse feed/tack store and see if they sell pine pellet bedding. Same thing as the pine pellets marketed for cats, but a fraction of the price. I think we were paying $7 for a 40# bag, but that was a few years ago. Regardless, it was a fraction the cost of Feline Pine or an equivalent. And like the super sack, if you buy a pallet at a time, they might be willing to deliver.Suggestion number 3: If there's a big box store in your area, like Target or Walmart, talk to them and ask what they do with their breakage and damaged pet products like litter and cat food. An open or damaged box/bag of litter can't be sold, but it can be donated to a rescue/shelter instead of thrown out. Same for opened/damaged boxes of food. Again, there will be some work (you'll have to send someone on a very regular basis to pick this stuff up) but it can turn into a *lot* of free food and litter.Oh, and if you do wind up buying multiple (normal) bags of litter or pellets in large quantities, ask if they can give a discount, especially if you're planning to continue purchases going forward. When you buy stuff a pallet at a time, they're usually willing to give you a break. (The worst they can say is no, so ask!)Hope that helps. Please let me know if you have questions.-Chris
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chris zorzi
Original Message:
Sent: 07-21- 09:32 AM
From: Amy Berke
Subject: Where to purchase non-clumping cat litter in bulk
Hi! We are a cat rescue and are looking for the cheapest way to purchase non-clumping cat litter in bulk. The cheapest I've found so far is Walmart at 19.4 cents per pound. We'd be willing to purchase pounds at one time if we can find a good price. Does anyone have any suggestions for places to purchase litter cheaply? We use the non-clumping in our infirmary & intake rooms as we change it daily, and also for our youngest kittens during their "learning" phase (ie: learning that litter is NOT food! LOL). Thanks in advance!
#OrganizationalManagement
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Amy Berke
St. Francis Animal Rescue of Venice Inc
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Original Message:Sent: 07-21- 11:35 PMFrom: chris zorziSubject: Where to purchase non-clumping cat litter in bulkSee if there's a pet food supply store in the area that sells their store brand of litter in bulk. (The type of situation where they sell you a first bucket, and then you bring back the empty bucket to be refilled for a set price.) If they offer non-clumping litter, ask them about doing a bulk purchase of their litter in the super sack it is delivered in.We did this for our Kitten Foster Program, although we get the clumping litter. It comes in a 3,000 lb sack and they're nice enough to deliver it to us on a pallet (it helps to have a relationship with the store so they're willing to help you) when we need more. You'll need a place to store it, and there's a bit of work involved breaking it down, but the savings are well worth it. We get ~135 filled jugs out of each super sack.------------------------------chris zorziOriginal Message:Sent: 07-21- 09:32 AMFrom: Amy BerkeSubject: Where to purchase non-clumping cat litter in bulkHi! We are a cat rescue and are looking for the cheapest way to purchase non-clumping cat litter in bulk. The cheapest I've found so far is Walmart at 19.4 cents per pound. We'd be willing to purchase pounds at one time if we can find a good price. Does anyone have any suggestions for places to purchase litter cheaply? We use the non-clumping in our infirmary & intake rooms as we change it daily, and also for our youngest kittens during their "learning" phase (ie: learning that litter is NOT food! LOL). Thanks in advance!------------------------------Amy BerkeSt. Francis Animal Rescue of Venice Inc------------------------------
How to Choose the Right Cat Litter For Your Cat
You found your feline kindred spirit and hes coming home from the animal shelter tomorrow. Today is shopping day. Time to procure the items on your list: cat food, toys, a scratching post, and grooming supplies. At the very top of the list are the litter box necessities. You head to the nearest pet supply superstore and are met by row upon row of cat litter choices. What to choose, what to choose! Whether you are an experienced owner or a novice, the multitude of choices is dizzying. This was not always the case.
Pay Dirt
Prior to World War II, most cats lived indoor/outdoor lives and their toileting areas were neighborhood backyards and gardens. For indoor needs, some families kept boxes of sand or ashes from the furnace for their cats use in the cellar. Housewives of the s were none too enamored with cats tracking ashes or sand through homes. An ex-sailor named Ed Lowe suggested that his neighbor try absorbent clay, a popular product for cleaning up industrial oil spills in wartime factories which just so happened to be made by his fathers firm. Eureka! Kitty litter was born.
Granulated clay litter offered improved odor control over ashes or sand by siphoning urine to the bottom of the pan and controlling ammonia smells until the litter reached a saturation point usually within a week in a box used by a single cat. Today, most folks who use granulated clay either scoop solids daily and completely replace the litter once a week or use less litter in the box and dump and clean daily. The granules of traditional litter are fairly large and do not tend to cling to a cats paws, so there is little tracking of litter outside the box.
To Clump or Not to Clump
Granulated clay litters remained unchallenged for nearly 40 years, with little change or refinement until Thomas Nelson, Ph.D. needed a way to supplement his income while in graduate school. The biochemist began to raise Persian cats and ended up developing clumping litter. Quoted in an October article in Cat Fancy magazine, Dr. Nelson explains, I hunted around and found clays that were dried but not baked. They were very absorbent and would form a clump when the cat urinated on them. The clump could then be removed, thereby getting rid of the urine. I had a box of litter I did not change in 10 years I just added more and it had absolutely no odor at all.
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The removal of almost all urine and feces does produce a better-smelling box area for weeks at a time without completely throwing out the old litter and starting from scratch. However, if more than one cat uses the box, there is usually a fairly pronounced odor in 4 to 6 weeks' time, even with scooping and litter replacement. It is essential to replace the approximate amount scooped out with fresh clumping litter, for if it is allowed to go below a certain volume, urine will tend to pool, and cake in corners and odors will arise.
Clumping litters are considerably more expensive than granulated clay. However, by , clumping litters with their superior odor control capabilities, captured more than half of the litter market.
Clumping litters offer a variety of products beyond the traditional scented and non-scented choices found with most granulated litters. Most cats prefer non-scented litter, an especially important point for owners who plan to use covered litter boxes. There are multi-cat formulas that form more cement-like clumps that will keep their form even when tread on by extra cat traffic; these are definitely not flushable! There are less-tracking formulas, which offer slightly larger granules that are more likely to fall off the cats paws before he leaves the box. And there are clumping litters developed especially for flushability, a quality most clumping litters dont have due to their expansive properties. Each year the list of varieties grows.
Several years ago, an article in the now-defunct holistic cat magazine Tiger Tribe questioned the safety of clumping litter if ingested, especially for neonate kittens who often eat litter when it is introduced to them during the weaning stage. Dr. James Richards, Director of Cornells Feline Health Center in Ithaca, NY recalls a flurry of Internet correspondence, letters by mail, and calls when the article appeared. But after using clumping litter at home and in his practice, and networking with veterinary surgeons and online contacts about the subject, Richards says, I have never encountered anyone who has seen a problem related to the clumping litter. If it occurs, it is rare indeed, and certainly, we would know by now. While there has been no proof to claims of problems in the scientific literature, caretakers may wish to delay introducing kittens to clumping litter until three months of age. Any cat older than that detected eating litter should be taken to a veterinarian, since this behavior may indicate anemia or other dietary deficiencies.
The field of cat litter doesnt end at granulated versus clumping clay. The shelves at the local pet supply emporium also hold an array of litters made from eco-friendly materials including recycled newspaper, corn cob, peanut shell meal, processed orange peel, wheat, pine sawdust and shavings, hardwood and cedar chips, silica gel beads, and crystals and automated self-cleaning litter boxes. All promise to be superior odor controllers, long-lasting, and earth-friendly. What to choose, what to choose
In , Dr. Peter Borchelt, an applied animal behaviorist, ran three 10-day tests to determine feline litter preference using a comparison of 14 types of the commercial litter as well as topsoil mixed with clay litter, and playbox sand. Each cat had six boxes to choose from; midway through the testing, the boxes were moved to prevent placement preference from overriding litter type preference. In test after test, fine-grained clumping litter was used more than twice as often as its nearest competitor, with boxes of wood chips, grain litter, and recycled paper litter going completely unused. Borchelt concludes, These data support the clinical observation that an important factor in cats preference for litter material is its texture, granularity or coarseness. . . a finely textured (clumping) clay, was preferred to clay with larger particle sizes. But playbox sand, which is also finely textured, was not preferred much more than coarse clay, perhaps because of the weight of the particles.
For more information, please visit Dust Free Bentonite Cat Litter.
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