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#1
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Composting cat Litter
I compost wood based cat litter but dutifully remove solids.
Someone asked me why I remove the faeces and I have forgotten? |
#2
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There is a small chance that cats faeces may contain roundworms ( Toxocara
cati) or the eggs which could be transferred to people, along with the health risks. My own advice would be to continue removing them! "Rupert" wrote in message ... I compost wood based cat litter but dutifully remove solids. Someone asked me why I remove the faeces and I have forgotten? |
#3
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David wrote:
There is a small chance that cats faeces may contain roundworms ( Toxocara cati) or the eggs which could be transferred to people, along with the health risks. My own advice would be to continue removing them! Another reason for doing so is that cat faeces are relatively high in protein (obligate carnivores often have relatively inefficient guts) so might attract interest from scavengers such as rats. It's a shame, though, as one could do with the extra nitrogent for the sawdust :-( regards sarah -- Think of it as evolution in action. |
#4
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"sarah" wrote in message . .. David wrote: There is a small chance that cats faeces may contain roundworms ( Toxocara cati) or the eggs which could be transferred to people, along with the health risks. My own advice would be to continue removing them! Another reason for doing so is that cat faeces are relatively high in protein (obligate carnivores often have relatively inefficient guts) so might attract interest from scavengers such as rats. It's a shame, though, as one could do with the extra nitrogent for the sawdust :-( It would be much healthier to just to water a little of the cheapest lawn fertiliser, or to put some Garotta into the compost heap if you have sawdust in it. Franz |
#5
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Franz Heymann wrote:
"sarah" wrote in message . .. David wrote: There is a small chance that cats faeces may contain roundworms ( Toxocara cati) or the eggs which could be transferred to people, along with the health risks. My own advice would be to continue removing them! Another reason for doing so is that cat faeces are relatively high in protein (obligate carnivores often have relatively inefficient guts) so might attract interest from scavengers such as rats. It's a shame, though, as one could do with the extra nitrogent for the sawdust :-( It would be much healthier to just to water a little of the cheapest lawn fertiliser, or to put some Garotta into the compost heap if you have sawdust in it. As I'm the one who handles the cat litter (and ensures the cats are wormed), I'm not worried about the parasite loading -- just the waste of nitrogen (or should that be the nitrogen of waste?). regards sarah -- Think of it as evolution in action. |
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