Showing posts with label Cat writer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cat writer. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Product of the Week-Litter Lifter


As some of you may know, I'm the product editor for Catnip, a wonderful newsletter published by Tufts University. I regularly find really great products. I'm going to start sharing one a week with you.

Litter-Lifter
I've been called the Queen of Cat Litter because I've tested so many cat litters, litter boxes, litter scoops, odor control products, litter mats, litter brooms...Okay, you get the picture. Did you know there’s a right and a wrong way to scoop clumpable litter? Cheap plastic scoops are flimsy and break up the clumps. With enough of those crumbs, even freshly scooped litter fills the house with "that aroma." You know the one--the smell that causes neighbors to sniff the air and ask, "Did you get another cat?"

Litter Lifter lets you scoop lots of poo in record time. It's made of rigid ABS plastic. There's nothing flimsy about this baby. With it you can tidy a box in seconds, but still manage to trap crumbs other scoops miss. The Litter-Lifter has 12 (count them 12) one-inch long wedge-shaped tines, that are narrower at the top and than at the bottom. Since litter slides through the teeth so quickly, and so close to the pan, it cuts down on dust. Dig the comfortable handle too. The scooping area measures 5-inches by 7-inches with a 6-inch long handle. It may not scoop by itself, but cuts down on the time it takes. Even though I get free scoops all the time, I try them and then toss them. None have compared to Litter Lifter. HAPPY SCOOPING!

For more information check out the Web site: www.litter-lifter.com or call Preferred Merchandizing, Inc at 888-548-8375.

Dusty Rainbolt
Member of Cat Writers' Association & International Association of Animal Behavior Consultants
Author of Cat Wrangling Made Easy, Ghost Cats: Human Encounters with Feline Spirits, Kittens for Dummies, All the Marbles
www.dustyrainbolt.com

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Hemingway Cats: Bureaucracy Gone Amok


Key West, Florida—it’s a sleepy little island that’s hosted pirates, presidents and celebrities. It’s laid back. So laid back the locals called it Key Weird. I loved visiting Key Weird. And it is… really weird.

It’s also the home of Ernest Hemingway, Amelia Earhart, Louisa May Alcott, Truman Copote and many other famous names. Okay, I know that the MIA aviatrix was born in Kansas and Capote took his first breath in New Orleans. This Earhart and Capote have four feet and purr. They are residents of the Ernest Hemingway Home and Museum—descendents of the author’s original treasured polydactyl cat, Snowball. There are some 50 contented kitties living on the one-acre Hemingway compound.

A couple of years ago a disgruntled cat-detesting neighbor complained about the Hemingway Museum being a nuisance because the occasional feline would scale the brick wall and explore the neighborhood. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) charged to the rescue. What makes the Hemingway cats the business of the esteemed USDA? Expense accounts—those poor agents have to trek to a popular resort town on the government’s dime (meaning you and I pay for the “work” trip) to investigate. The USDA determined that they had jurisdiction because the cats are an exhibit similar to a circus. That’s right, the cats, who get weekly vet checks and spend their time wandering the grounds are in the same category with performing tigers and zoo exhibits. (Can you say “Margaritas on an unlimited expense account?” Arriba!) The USDA continued to pursue the case even after judges dismissed it. At one point, the agency rented a room in a guesthouse near the Hemingway property in order to videotape the cats. There were midwinter visits to the sunny little island for high-ranking investigators, too. Yes indeed, ladies and gentlemen, our tax dollars at work.

In a time when contaminated food regularly makes its way onto our grocery store shelves and sometimes even into our pet food bowls, it seems criminal that this government agency would become obsessed about 50 historically significant cats belonging to a museum.

The thing that makes this case all the more appalling is Key West has a huge feral chicken population. You read that right. In 2004, Assistant City Manager John Jones estimated Key West had between 1,500 and 2,000 feral chickens roaming the 2-mile by 4-mile long island. It’s against the law to hurt, kill, eat, harass or molest the chickens in Key West. In an age where one only whispers the words “bird flu”, you’d think the USDA would have more pressing things to worry about in Key West.

The USDA made lots of suggestions over the years including caging the cats, installing an electric fence (isn’t that a lawsuit waiting to happen?), and removing them outright. After five years, the agency came to its senses and contacted animal behaviorist and professor at the University of Florida's College of Veterinary Medicine in Miami, Terry Curtis, DVM. Dr. Curtis said in a report that the cats appeared "well-cared for, healthy and content" and suggested the museum install a special fence. Unlike the USDA, Dr. Curtis took into consideration the historic nature of the property and the safety of both the cats and museum visitors. She recommended the property be surrounded by Purr-Fect Fence, a patent pending cat containment system made by Purr-Fect Fence LLC. Sounds like they could have easily come up with the Purr-fect idea five years earlier. But with free trips to a Florida resort town, where’s the incentive?

Over the five-year battle the museum has spent more than $250,000 for lawyers and the fence. The question still boils about whether or not the museum should be required to get a USDA license for the cats. Once again, the courts might have to settle that question.

Remember, folks. The USDA sacrificed so much for you. You are now protected from those dangerous kitty cats at the Ernest Hemingway House and Museum. Now, anyone for fried chicken?

Tune in next week for more Confessions of a Cat Writer. Same Cat Time…Same Cat Channel.

(You can see pictures of the Hemingway cats and the Key West Chickens on my Zootoo page http://www.zootoo.com/profile/dustycatwriter.)

Dusty Rainbolt
Member of Cat Writers' Association & International Association of Animal Behavior Consultants
Host of Paranormal Pets on PetLifeRadio.com
Author of Cat Wrangling Made Easy: Maintaining Peace & Sanity in Your Multicat Home, Ghost Cats: Human Encounters with Feline Spirits, Kittens for Dummies, All the Marbles
www.dustyrainbolt.com