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On
The Prowl:
A
Feline Purr…spective

The Smart Cat
Box
By
Stacy Mantle
A
review of the newest product on the market for cat owners! The Smart
Box! Read on for details about this wonderful new product...
Probably
one of the most important items there is to a cat caretaker is the
almighty litter box. Choose one too small, and you have
unhappy felines who will take out their displeasure on your favorite
houseplant. Choose one too big, and you have more than one
feline fighting for territory. Choose a non-clumping litter
and forget (just once!) to change it, and our finicky felines will
refuse to use it, or worse, you will face the unpleasant fate of
living at that infamous “cat house” in the neighborhood – you
know, the one the neighbors always talk about when they walk by,
crossing the street and mumbling under their breath as they amble
by. Choose a clumping litter and you are faced with the
possibility of your favorite felines contracting upper respiratory
infections from the fine dust that drifts upwards into even your own
nostrils, despite the mask you wear when cleaning.
Litter
boxes are far more complex than most non-cat people understand, and
while it can be one of our most talked about subjects among cat
caretakers, much like parents with young children talk about the
best diaper for toddlers, it’s the subject that we most abhor.
There
are other options to cat boxes, of course. We could toilet
train our cats, and I know of many who have done just that.
However, as one who resides with 14 cats and a husband in a
two-bathroom house, I just have a feeling that I would never be
allowed entrance to the bathroom again. Toilet training our
cats is simply not an option for me. I could just picture
Booger walking in on Ghost as he sat on the toilet, Ghost slamming
the door with his little paw, which then hits Booger above the eye,
necessitating a trip to the veterinarian in the middle of the night;
only to have the same event repeated when we returned home late that
evening, forcing us to return back to the emergency veterinarian for
stitches (an event that actually occurred between my brother and I
while growing up – my poor mother!). No – toilet training
simply is not for this household.
Up
to this date, being the savvy 21st century person I am, I
have chosen to be automated in my life, and that includes my litter
boxes. Over the past few years, I have been using several
large Littermaid litter boxes, which I doubt I would ever trade in.
The disadvantage to these boxes is, of course, the dust that is
created from using the clumping litter. However, there are
trade offs to everything in life, and as long as I stay on top of
the situation, and take care of any allergies in my felines as they
occur, things seem to be okay.
Once
in a while, though, it is necessary for me to monitor a cat’s
“output” for health reasons. For example, crystals
(urinary tract infections) are a recurring theme in our household,
and while we do our best to control these issue through diet and by
encouraging an increase in water consumption, it is also important
to obtain a random urinalysis from each cat once in a while.
With large, fully automated, community litter boxes – which clean
up the “output” within 3 minutes after a cat exits, monitoring
each cat becomes an impossible feat.
And
so, normally in order to obtain a urinalysis, I would have to take a
very uncooperative feline into the veterinarian, allow said
veterinarian to do many unpleasant things to my beloved pet, pay
said veterinarian anywhere from $75 - $125 for making my cat (and
myself) very unhappy, bring home a very irate cat who refuses to
speak to me for several days, and generally go to the Emergency Room
myself for a tetanus shot and antibiotics after “very unhappy
feline” bites me for my efforts to properly care for it.
Those
days are behind me now, because I have recently been introduced to a
product that allows me to obtain a urinalysis nearly for free,
without any stress to my pets or my veterinarian, and which has
completely eliminated any hospitalization time for me.
The product is called “Smart
Box”. This wonderful little contraption is a
simple little litter box that uses a (get this) UN-absorbent
litter, which allows urine to filter through a small network of
boxes, and into a contained holding area. I can then either
take that little box into the vet, or I can empty it into a plastic
baggie, and take that into the vet, in order to get the urine
sample analyzed for crystals. There are a staggering number of
health reasons why this box is valuable.
Another
reason I like this box is the environmental aspects. By
emptying out the holding tray into the toilet, you can simply flush
it down, and there is no waste to throw into the garbage, nothing to
pollute our lands and irritate our neighbors. The waxy corn
cob pellets can be easily sprayed once a week with a solution of
lemon juice, alcohol, and water once a week, then mixed with a scoop
and allowed to dry for 15 minutes or so to keep fresh. In this
way, the box is self-cleaning. There is little waste, the
urine empties into an enclosed holding tank, and the “movements”
can be scooped and flushed.
However,
being a lazy cat owner, I equate this product with the use of cloth
diapers: If you have one, maybe even two, children in diapers
at one time – using cloth diapers is a wonderful way to help save
the environment. And the same goes for the Smart Cat Box.
If you have one or even two cats, this is a fantastic full-time
system for you. There is almost no waste as the pellets last
several months without being replaced, it’s extremely economical
and environmentally friendly, and it works incredibly well.
But,
if you are the mother of say, quintuplets, and you are trying to
feed a litter and change their diapers and get them down for
naps, and all of those things that crazed quintuplet parents try to
do, I’m not really sure I would use this system fulltime.
Would I buy one and keep it for health reasons? Absolutely –
no questions asked. I would double my money back on ONE trip
to the vet.
All
in all – great system for the environmental, humane, economically
minded person – which I’m sure we all are, or all aspire to be.
The Smart Cat Box is something that I would recommend to all feline
caretakers, and something that my own felines have shown more of a
preference for using – if only their owner weren’t so lazy!
From
the Cats:
Hisses
& Spits:
If only our owner would clean it more often! Will you find a
way to automate it?
Purrs:
Purring contentedly... We love the soft corncobs!
From
the Humans:
Two
opposable thumbs up! Find a way to automate it, and I’ll take
four!
Drawback?
While the tank is generous in its capacity, it just simply isn’t
enough to accommodate a large household of cats. Treat it like
you would any other litter box, and get one for each feline – keep
it clean, and you’re set. Make sure you check the “holding
tank” – I’ve not had any “overflows” but don’t know what
would happen if it wasn’t checked often…
About the Author
Stacy Mantle is a freelance writer who currently
resides in the southwestern deserts of Arizona with a number of
cats, a coyote/wolf hybrid, and a very understanding husband. Her
writing has appeared in publications such as The Arabian Horse
Times, Today’s AZ Woman, and Pets Illustrated. Many of
her stories and articles have been translated into several
languages, and now reach an international audience. Quickly becoming
known as "…the Erma Bombeck of animals", her
writing has skyrocketed to new heights as she records the stories of
those she loves, inspiring the reader to learn why we have all come
to love the animals we share our lives with. She is the author of Conquering
the Food Chain: Living Amongst Animals (Without Becoming One),
which is available in Barnes & Noble bookstores nationwide, as
well as online at www.bn.com
or www.amazon.com.
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