Nice to hear someone else knows catshit is great ferts. I dont tell people to dig thru their box...just lift out the chunks

I wouldnt and dont do it indoors, but for outdoor growers for non edible items, it is hard to beat.


I cannot grow outside but if I would, I would side by side and test them both and I stake my years wages on the cat shit plant would outperform most commercial ferts and your catshit from your clean indoor cat will never get you sick.

The whole toxicplasma issue was stirred by a pharmaceutical company who realized some indigent pregnant women were getting sick...and they linked the cat shit. they failed to make the public aware the original data came from poor impoverished women who lived in slums in Philadelphia where even the rats got sick.

Anyhow, they were able to sell about $1,000,000,000 a year worth of antibiotics knowing people wouldnt get rid of the cats.

This is from the US Council on Composting....

US Composting Council bulletin board:

Pet manures should be composted. In fact, all organic materials should be recycled. Lots of people ask what to do with pet feces...

If they do not have a thermophilic composting system to throw their pet manures into, or if they're uncomfortable with the idea of adding their pet manures to their compost pile, then create a separate compost bin (perhaps one of those garbage-can size plastic ones) and add the pet manures with normal cover materials like grass clippings etc. Maybe add some water now and then. When full, start to fill another bin and leave the first to rest (maybe throw some earth worms in there at this point). When the second one is full, assuming it takes at least a year to fill a bin, use the contents of the first bin for horticultural purposes, like shrubs, fruit trees, etc. This makes a lot more sense than burying dog and cat feces in a landfill. "