Home     Article Archive     Syndication     Contact Search

Marketplace

Cat Grass

Cat GrassCatnip - Saves your houseplants from their abusers Feline

Make your cats nibble constantly on your houseplants? If you're tired of bite marks in your little ferns and wake up to your bamboo on the ground, get something of their own!

catnip (Dactylis glomerata) gives something to snack on cats, and supplements their diet with a variety of essential nutrients. Cats can eat a few blades of grass every day, to give them sufficient quantities of it to keep them coming back.

It is best to plant a lot of it in a short, wide pot and place it near cats. The pot keeps cats off the switch, creating still more damage.

Some cats eventually expel the grass a cat vomiting. While this is good for cats (by reducing the problems of hairballs), it can cause all sorts of headaches around the house. You can buy small quantities of grass cat to test the reaction of your cat before you buy a plant that will make your cat vomit everywhere.

You can complete the catnip with catnip for an adjunctive treatment for cats that hold their attention, leaving only your houseplants. Make sure the pot is extra tough and difficult to knock over (this can contribute to weight basis) that cats tend to go into catnip Batty. Catnip does not make cats sick, so if your cat ends up vomiting after eating cat grass, catnip is a great way to go.

Keep plants in a container from cat food, so they do not see the plants for food regularly.

Posted on August 15, 2010.
Share |

Comments

There are no comments.

Leave a Comment

Your Name
Your Email
Comments
Human Check. Type 4056.

Popular Posts
Pet Snakes
Double Decker Rabbit Hutch
Irish Horses
Id Pet Food
Fluval Duo 800
Rabbit Pet Shop
Arctic Cat Snowmobile Manuals
Mosaic Birdbath

Blogroll
Gamed Owner
Toy Parlour
Game Fringe
Bath Divine
Home Tactic
Home Combat
Sunbeam Home
Home Soak
Crickets Kitchen
Mission Yard
Curt Yard
Safety Freaks