Litter boxes should be scooped at least once a day.
Can you put clumping cat litter in the toilet.
This litter is made to bunch up and cling together.
The list of reasons why you shouldn t flush cat litter down the toilet or put it down a sink or shower drain is fairly long but perhaps the most important one concerns water flow.
It s advised to break up any large clumps before you flush it so that means that larger clumps can clog the pipes.
Once all the boxes in your house are scooped tie off the garbage bag in a knot.
Because many varieties of cat litter clump when exposed to moisture the litter has a tendency to clump together and form a near solid mass in the bowl.
Those are the two main reasons why cat litter should not be flushed down a toilet.
Most cat litter and especially the clumping variety will block up waste pipes and cause you major plumbing problems.
Just as you should scoop and throw away a clay clumping litter so should you scoop and toss a silica clumping litter into the trash.
So if you throw it into your toilet it will form clumps.
Not all types of cat litter are flushable and flushing the non flushable cat litter can clog pipes.
When you flush it large clumps can cause a blockage in your pipes.
If you have a water saving type of toilet the flushing power on that toilet is usually not strong enough to push those kinds of clumps further down the sewer system.
Thankfully a silica clumping litter doesn t produce as much dust as clay litters during clean ups.
Clumping litters are great for trapping urine so it can be easily removed with a scoop just like solid waste.
Still inhaling or ingesting silica clumping litter dust is linked to potential health problems.
Use a litter scoop to sift out urine clumps and stool and place in a small trash bag.
And that is when i learned for the first time what happens when you flush even a little incidental bit of cat litter down a toilet which is apparently why cat litter boxes say in big capital.
Many types of cat litter are designed to absorb moisture and will expand by as much as 15 times its original size.
This type of litter clumps when it comes into contact with water.
A flushable cat litter may cause clogs and a non flushable one definitely will.
To prevent odor and bacterial leakage double bag your scooped litter.
You ll wind up with a backed up toilet and a hefty bill from the plumber.