Hi!

So curious if anyone has any tips regarding this. We have our cat litter in the washroom of the house. The current cat sand we use has a distinct smell. While we are experimenting with different types of sand, they all, so far, have some sort of smell to them. Obviously it will also smell extra bad whenever the cats use the litter box. While we do remove the litter as soon as possible, we are curious if there are ways to at least mask the smell of the sand with something else… Anyone got any tips?

  • Railison@aussie.zone
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    3 months ago

    The quicker the poo dries out, the quicker it stops smelling. This is one of the benefits of crystals, but I prefer wood pellets for the same reason.

    • Venator@lemmy.nz
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      3 months ago

      Apparently the Crystals can be a bit sharp sometimes and lead to cuts, I’ve not seen it happen personally but switched to wood pellets that have some baking soda or something in it too since I heard that.

      • Railison@aussie.zone
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        3 months ago

        Yeah I find that the pellets dry everything out after about an hour. You just gotta be on top of emptying the sawdust as it piles up and things stay pretty odour free

  • tiotok@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    We use a pure-clay, non-clumping litter for that reason. I hate the chemical smell of the clumping litters. I’ve also heard really great things about wood pellets.

  • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Step 1) Get rid of your cat, and the littler box.

    Step 2) Vacume everywhere. You’ve heard that glitter is the herpies of the art world. Well, vacume like you’re about to go on the hottest of dates, and you don’t want your date to realise that your apartment has herpies. Ok, I lost track of the analogy almost immediately, but you get the point.

    Step 3) Fabreeze. Yeah, turns out it’s not just perfume in a bottle. I found out you can even buy non-scented fabreeze, which was the original, and it just neutralizes the scents in the air. It didn’t sell well, so they added the perfumes. But it still neutralizes the odors. So once the perfume scent fades, you’re still left with an apartment with less odor. A tactic I wish my neighbors would use. I swear at this point they’re creating new foods to be the selliest to cook.

    Here, have a raw fish, thats somehow cooking, mixed with old cheese, cigar smoke, grandpa farts, and skunk spray side dipping sauce.

    Anyways, my point is, if you have a cat, your home will smell like you have a cat. That’s just part of having a cat. Just like waking up every day, and having a cats asshole in your face as you wake up. No matter how many times you push her cat butt away and say “no cat butt!”, they’ll always start your day with a cat butt in your face.

    Have a cat, or have a home without cat smell. Your choice.

  • Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    We use a “flushable” clumping corn-based litter. We don’t actually flush the clumps of litter, that’s a recipe for disaster. But it does mean I can scoop poops directly into the toilet and flush them. (My cat never got the memo on burying poops, but she does warn us when she’s going to go, so I can get them right away.) I scoop the clumps into those little green dogpoop bags, and put those in a lidded can with a liner. It’s not perfect but it’s not bad. We also discovered our bathroom vent fan just went into the walls, so we had a contractor run a proper vent duct to the outside, made showering in there much better as well.

  • workerONE@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Try fresh step crystals. It lasts a month and doesn’t smell. I’ve had up to 9 cats before, I tried so many solutions. Scoop the poop every couple of days, no problem

  • myliltoehurts@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    It doesn’t eliminate the smell, but air purifiers can reduce it significantly. We have a decent one in the room where the litters are that turns on on a schedule. It’s a bit annoying that if the cats use the litter just when it’s turning off then it’s kinda no use.

    My long term plan if I ever get around to it is to build a cupboard type thing to put their litter in with an extractor fan to the outside.

    Litter robots could help, but all the people I know who have them said they just replace some issues and chores with other issues and chores in the end.

  • doom_walker@feddit.uk
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    3 months ago

    If you clean the litter tray regularly, replace the litter once per week, and keep the house well ventilated then there should not be a bad smell. If there is it may be worth taking your cat to the vet if their poo smells worse than usual.

  • ramble81@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    My neighbor uses crushed walnut shell litter and I can never smell anything. I was thinking of getting it too.

  • JayleneSlide@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    When I still had kitties (and a house), I bought a litter box with a lid. I then fashioned a vent hose with a 120mm 12V PCM fan running at low RPM. The hose went through the ceiling in a closet and exhausted out an attic vent. Zero cat box smell and no noise. While my exact implementation isn’t available to everyone (like in apartments), the basics can be adapted to almost any situation.

  • 0oWow@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    For a spray that actually will kill the odor, try Ozium. But that probably needs to be an additional tool in your arsenal.

  • FrostyCaveman@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    Using litter tray liners virtually eliminates the smell in my apartment. Also recycled paper litter. Of course, now my overlord the cat asks me to give him a fresh one multiple times a day, since he loves the freshness too.

  • Tinks@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Honestly, look into the Breeze litter boxes. They’re not automatic or anything crazy expensive, but it really does make a HUGE difference. I’ve been told by multiple strangers “I thought you had a cat?” after being in my house a while because she hides and the box generally cannot be smelled. If you change the pads regularly (i.e. before they are full), replace the pellets 2-3 times a year, and clean the box itself when replacing the pellets, the only smell you will have is from poop. I personally buy the bioplastic dog poop bags in bulk, and just use those to quickly grab and dispose of it.

    When we used regular litter the cats tracked it everywhere, flung it out of the box, and it always had a smell, even when cleaned daily. I have none of those things with the Breeze boxes. We were using two when we had 3 cats and I had to replace the pads every 3 days. Now with one cat I replace the pads every week to two weeks depending on whether she divides her usage or fixates on one. We pick up the poop as soon as we notice it, which is usually very quickly because they can’t really bury it as well. I will never go back to traditional litter.

      • driving_crooner@lemmy.eco.br
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        3 months ago

        Can’t say, the best thing of the pellets os that they dissolve when they piss on, so you can filter the dirty wood for the clean one.

      • Venator@lemmy.nz
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        3 months ago

        Might be bad for thier lungs if it goes in the air when they dig. The wood pellets look like some sort of compressed sawdust, so maybe there’s a way to make the sawdust a bit less… dusty?

        • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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          3 months ago

          Pause for a moment to be a woodworking nerd: Not all “sawdust” is alike. There’s an entire science behind chip formation , and in a wood shop the type, shape and size of chips varies widely depending on the cutter and operation. Wood shops produce shavings of all sizes from hand plane shavings which resemble paper tape to sanding swarf which is microscopic powder. If I were to choose from my own various production of wood chips to use as cat litter, I think I’d go for planer/jointer shavings which are confetti-like and similar to what they used to sell as rodent bedding, like the cedar chips you’re warned not to use for hamsters anymore. I would also try to choose a wood that is less aromatic than a softwood, maybe something like ash, maple or oak.

          Apparently those wood pellets (often manufactured as a surprisingly efficient stove fuel but other uses abound) are made first by putting wood through a hammer mill which produces a homogeneous dough-like substance, which is then extruded through a die which has the effect of plasticizing the lignin turning it into basically tree hamburger. Same chemical makeup as wood but none of the original structure. I imagine this could be made of practically any size of shavings, chips or swarf.