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I've got 5 cats in our home. Of late, one or two of them had decided to start using the carpet instead of the litter box, I guess to indicate that the condition of their box wasn't suitable for them (it was completely changed once a week). So I decided to switch to the clumping cat litter and it's worked great, no more messes and the babies are happy. However, we have one kitty with diabetes and his back legs don't work as well as the others. The clumping cat litter is getting stuck to his back paws and we can't find an easy solution to remove it, without causing him distress. The litter won't "wash off" very easily, obviously because of the way the clumping cat litter works. Has anyone else had this problem and knows of a good solution? We've only switched over a week or 10 days ago, but I want to get this under control before he gets in distress.

2006-11-25 00:49:00 · 8 answers · asked by Melissa B 1 in Pets Cats

8 answers

If only one of your cats is having trouble with the new litter, maybe you could get him his own litter box with the old litter. I've never had this problem before, but if the old litter was easier for him, you might as well try this. Once this happened to my cat, and it was because I forgot to clean his litter box. I've heard somewhere that each cat should have their own litter box so they don't get full as often. Because I have one cat, and I empty his litter box completely every week, too, and his is always full. It's either my cat poops too much or one litter box isn't enough.

2006-11-25 11:58:02 · answer #1 · answered by !DookDook! ♥ 6 · 0 0

Litter Sticks

2016-12-10 14:44:47 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

My cats are long haired and have very furry paws which tends to attract the clumping from time to time. I have also had issues with it getting stuck on their backsides, and it can be very difficult to remove when dry. In my house, it seems that increasing the depth of the litter has helped with the paw issue. I have one or two who just refuse to cover any of their "products" and I think sometimes another cat jumps into the box, not realizing that there's a bit of a mushy puddle below. To compound it, one of them tends to push all the litter to one side of the box before going, then doesn't cover it. Putting more litter in seems to have reduced this. One of my girls actually wipes her front paws on the inside of the box before exiting- too bad she can't teach that skill to the others!

2006-11-25 01:12:33 · answer #3 · answered by kimberly m 2 · 0 0

You could try to get him his very own litter box. and you clay litter for him, I love the scooping hard clumping litter. How many litter boxes do you have? I just have one but I use the multi cat formula.And I scoop every morning just for her. That is the key scoop out three or more times a day with five cats or get more boxes.Maybe some of the urine is still sticking to his little paws.and making the wet litter stick as well.

2006-11-25 00:59:26 · answer #4 · answered by Pamela V 7 · 0 0

i appreciate particular Kitty cat clutter... except for at the same time as i'm employing those very previous few inches. you want about 6 inches a minimum of contained in the field to evade clumping on the bottom. i take advantage of a wide coated field and promote off 0.5 to an complete field of clutter in at a time. Then i take advantage of Arm and Hammer Baking soda for cat clutter. I observe the clutter absolutely sticks to the scooper on each and every occasion i'm on those very previous few inches. back, i have been employing the particular Kitty for years. Our oldest cat is 6 years previous. in case you shop adequate clutter contained in the field, it would not clump on the cats. Yeah, the monitoring in all places is an argument although that. i ought to attempt those timber range pellets out that somebody else said. My issue with the clumping clutter is that that's so intense priced.

2016-11-26 21:19:03 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

You can purchase mats that are made to put outside of your litter box, the mat is supposed to collect the litter that gets caught on the cats feet.
Hope this helps.

2006-11-25 01:00:17 · answer #6 · answered by eyes_of_iceblue 5 · 0 0

you are goingto have to clean his paws every few days by soaking them in warm water with a little dishwashing soap in it.Good luck!

2006-11-25 00:57:42 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

JUST KEEP THE BOX CLEANED OUT

2006-11-25 00:54:18 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

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