Zeolite & Cats
Zeolite & Cats
I've been told that zeolite is often used as cat litter, and that it is really good for "soaking up" ammonia. The only (unscented, unbleached) cat litter that I've seen is something called sepiolite. Is this the same stuff as zeolite, if it isn't can it be used in the same way, and finally, does anyone know which cat litter (if any) does use pure zeolite? I've been recommended putting a small bag of zeolite in a tank as I move my big giraffe cat to his new home, to keep the ammonia down.
- RickE
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Re: Zeolite & Cats
Hi Alan
You would be safer using zeolite designed for aquaria, most shops sell it. this is an example:
http://www.aquarium-parts.co.uk/acatalog/Zeolite.html
Rick
You would be safer using zeolite designed for aquaria, most shops sell it. this is an example:
http://www.aquarium-parts.co.uk/acatalog/Zeolite.html
Rick
Rick
- MatsP
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Re: Zeolite & Cats
I agree with RickE.
You may also want to consider a battery/12V air-pump and a sponge filter (matured by keeping in the current tank).
Also, I wouldn't feed the fish for a few days before transport, and bear in mind that 2.5 hours isn't THAT long.
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Mats
You may also want to consider a battery/12V air-pump and a sponge filter (matured by keeping in the current tank).
Also, I wouldn't feed the fish for a few days before transport, and bear in mind that 2.5 hours isn't THAT long.
--
Mats
Re: Zeolite & Cats
I'm already onto that; I'm going to use a 650W inverter (running from the car battery) with an air pump and filter (poss Fluval 4+) with media from the tank's filter. I'm even considering how I could suspend a Rena Smart Heater high up near the waterline (so no burns on the fish) with the outflow of the fluval running through it. But I may scrap that bit.MatsP wrote: You may also want to consider a battery/12V air-pump and a sponge filter (matured by keeping in the current tank).
Last edited by Alan on 21 Jan 2010, 21:58, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Zeolite & Cats
Regular as clockwork, every time I do a water change in his tank he goes to the loo (think medium dog sized fish, so a big poo!) so I'm going to do a water change a couple of days before, then not feed him again.MatsP wrote: I wouldn't feed the fish for a few days before transport, and bear in mind that 2.5 hours isn't THAT long.
- MatsP
- Posts: 21038
- Joined: 06 Oct 2004, 13:58
- My articles: 4
- My images: 28
- My cats species list: 117 (i:33, k:0)
- My aquaria list: 10 (i:8)
- My BLogs: 4 (i:0, p:97)
- Spotted: 187
- Location 1: North of Cambridge
- Location 2: England.
Re: Zeolite & Cats
If you are building a box yourself, why not just line it with polystyrene before you put the liner in - it's only going to cost a few quid for a 25mm, 600 x 2400 or 1200 x 2400 sheet (and you probably want to line the box anyways to avoid any scuffing/wearing of the pond-liner. And if you make a lid too, it will loose very little heat. Run the heater in the car, and you should arrive with a fish that is in nice water.Alan wrote:I'm already onto that; I'm going to use a 650W inverter (running from the car battery) with an air pump and filter (poss Fluval 4+) with media from the tank's filter. I'm even considering how I could suspend a Rena Smart Heater high up near the waterline (so no burns on the fish) with the outflow of the fluval running through it. But I may scrap that bit.MatsP wrote: You may also want to consider a battery/12V air-pump and a sponge filter (matured by keeping in the current tank).
--
Mats