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  1. #1
    Registered User hovafl's Avatar
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    Kittly litter as rat bedding. Pro's and Con's

    I am currently not breeding my own feeder rats but I am strongly considering starting my own colony. I currently puchase my feeders from a local pet store and get a considerably good deal since I've been doing buisness with them for many years, but after some consideration I am debating my own colony. I have decided against this in the past due to the strong ammonia smell regardless of frequent cleaning.
    I was again faced with the amonia issue when i would purchase to many feeders during breeding season, when most of my snakes went off feed. I now had several rats I had to house until my snakes would feed. My solution to this was using kitty litter as substrate in the rats temporary homes.
    Which now brings me to the Pro's of using Kitty litter. I use "Cat's Pride" kitty litter and it eliminates the odor of the rats totally. The litter is fine enough to where I can sift out the rat droppings as you would that of a cat without having to change the substrate. The kitty litter makes the maintanence extremely simple.
    The only Con I currently face is the fact that the litter is so fine when the rats are in active play the surrounding area of their containers is generally pretty dusty. I have housed rats in this bedding generally no longer then about two weeks with no visible issues.
    So I am asking from those more experienced what would be some possible issues I would face should I decided to use this bedding when starting my colony?
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  2. #2
    BPnet Lifer PghBall's Avatar
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    Re: Kittly litter as rat bedding. Pro's and Con's

    Hmm. Good question. The only concern I would have would be the dust. Though I am sticking to the kiln dried Pine shavings that I get at the local Wal-Mart.
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  3. #3
    BPnet Veteran Alexandra V's Avatar
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    Re: Kittly litter as rat bedding. Pro's and Con's

    I personally don't recommend using kitty litter for anything other than that - kitty litter. There are two reasons for this: first is that if it is accidentally ingested it will literally clump inside the animal like it does when you pour water on it, and second is that the dust can cause respiratory issues for the animal.
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  4. #4
    BPnet Veteran Shadera's Avatar
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    Re: Kittly litter as rat bedding. Pro's and Con's

    Rats don't know not to root around in it. Moist nose + clay or clumping litter = problems.

    I wouldn't. Kiln dried pine is just as eay and cheap to come by. If you clean often enough, there shouldn't be ammonia buildup. But then again, they're rats. Ever wonder why people who breed their own feeders typically do so outside of the house? I ditched breeding norways for just that reason, and now only breed mice and soft furs.
    Last edited by Shadera; 08-18-2010 at 11:50 AM.
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  5. #5
    Old enough to remember. Freakie_frog's Avatar
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    Re: Kittly litter as rat bedding. Pro's and Con's

    I'd be leery to feed a rat that had been on hat kind of bedding. Modern litters have all kinds of stuff to kill oder and smells good, clump together..all that dust gets in the rat's hair and in turn in your snake..just not really a good idea given the alternative's.
    When you've got 10,000 people trying to do the same thing, why would you want to be number 10,001? ~ Mark Cuban
    "for the discerning collector"



  6. #6
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    Re: Kittly litter as rat bedding. Pro's and Con's

    I used to sprinkle it in the bottom before I added pine shavings. I never noticed any health issues, but there was a good layer of shavings between the rats and the litter. I have since switched to a combination of softwood shavings and the compressed wood pellets for horse stalls. The wood pellets are easily as absorbent as the cat litter and they are affordable. The downside is the dust and weight (also a downside to cat litter), but combining the pellets with shavings moderates those negative aspects.
    - Paul

  7. #7
    BPnet Lifer PghBall's Avatar
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    Re: Kittly litter as rat bedding. Pro's and Con's

    Quote Originally Posted by Shadera View Post
    Rats don't know not to root around in it. Moist nose + clay or clumping litter = problems.

    I wouldn't. Kiln dried pine is just as eay and cheap to come by. If you clean often enough, there shouldn't be ammonia buildup. But then again, they're rats. Ever wonder why people who breed their own feeders typically do so outside of the house? I ditched breeding norways for just that reason, and now only breed mice and soft furs.
    Hey Shadera,

    Do you have less odor issues with your mice? I know when I was breeding both mice and rats, the mice always smelled alot more and alot sooner than my rats did. I had both on the same bedding so that was not the issue. I finally switched all of my snakes over to rats and just fed off all of my mice. Just wanted your input about that. I just breed Fancy rats and never did Norways. Maybe that is it?
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  8. #8
    BPnet Veteran Shadera's Avatar
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    Re: Kittly litter as rat bedding. Pro's and Con's

    Norway = short way of saying "fancy rat", and to differentiate from the african soft fur rats I also breed.

    I don't notice much smell with my mice at all. I keep 1.3 in 10 gallon tanks, and clean weekly. I only thoroughly wash out the tanks every couple months, and I find that it cuts down on the males scent marking everything (and stinking more). I don't feed many, though I do try to give my reptiles a varied rodent diet so they are far less likely to ever be picky eaters. Most of my guys will eat anything I dangle into the tub.

    At one point I had several hundred norways going, and though they didn't stink as long as I cleaned tubs constantly, it just got to be too much to keep up with. Once I move to somewhere I can build their own building for them complete with ventilation system, it won't be so bothersome and I can stick with my once weekly routine. I'm just the kind of person that doesn't like it when people walk into my house and say, "what's that smell?". So for sow I raise soft furs and mice, and the rats are FT only. They stink a lot less in my freezer.
    Last edited by Shadera; 08-18-2010 at 01:50 PM.
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  10. #9
    BPnet Lifer PghBall's Avatar
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    Re: Kittly litter as rat bedding. Pro's and Con's

    I always thought that Fancy rats were slightly different than Norways. I was thinking that Norway's were only large brown sewer type rats. Getting back to my original question, I have my rats in the basement and I only get that "eww what's that smell" from my mother and sisters who don't like my snakes to begin with...haha. I clean my rats weekly and have only about a max of 70-80 rats (includes Breeders, small-med, weaned, hoppers, fuzzies and pinks) at any one time. The "smell" is really minimal most of the time and only noticable around the 6th day after I have cleaned them. My mice on the other hand seemed to stink after just a few days and I cleaned them as often or more. Oh well.
    - Greg

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  11. #10
    BPnet Veteran Shadera's Avatar
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    Re: Kittly litter as rat bedding. Pro's and Con's

    Different people tolerate things differently. As I said above, there's a reason so many larger breeders give their rodents their own shed. It's not just me that doesn't appreciate the massive amounts of ammonia lots of rats put off. I was cleaning tubs every 3 days, and 100 tubs twice a week leaves little time to take care of my almost 100 snakes.

    As long as it works for you, no reason to stop what you're doing.
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    PghBall (08-18-2010)

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