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So You Wanna Do More? Not content
with just getting by? Go hardcore.
1. Compost their poop American dogs and cats create 10 million tons
of waste a year, and no one knows where it's going, according to Will Brinton, a
scientist in Mount Vernon, Maine, and one of the world's leading authorities on
waste reduction and composting.
Most of our pets' poop either winds up in a landfill purgatory, where it's
embalmed practically forever in plastic bags, or sits on the ground until the
next rainstorm washes it into the sewer where it can drift on down to rivers and
beaches. You can compost the poop -- just don't use it with your vegetable
garden, because the compost doesn't heat up enough to kill pathogens such as E.
coli., which could contaminate your homegrown produce and land up in your (very
unhappy) belly.
If you have room in your backyard, you can bury an old garbage bin (note: far
away from your vegetable garden) to use as a pet-waste composter. Or check out the Doggie Dooley.
The makers of the Doggy Dooley also sell an enzymatic "Super Digester
Concentrate" for your backyard pet septic system.
2. Be a pet chef If you want to know exactly what is going into
your furball's food dish or your pet suffers from allergies, you can always make
your own puppy (or kitty) chow. If the idea of becoming a full-time pet chef is
just crazy talk, making the occasional meal or treat is completely doable. Those
broccoli stalks left over from your last stir-fry also make some tasty morsels
for your pup.
3. Get crafty Your cat will love you forever if you grow your own
organic catnip or cat grass. Scrap yarn and fabric you might otherwise toss can
also easily be transformed into pet toys with some basic crafty know-how. And
they wouldn't have had to be trucked thousands of miles just to get drooled on.
4. Get ticks off While you don't want to douse your pet in toxins,
it is also important to keep the bugs in check. Pets can carry ticks, and ticks
can carry Lyme Disease, a serious and poorly understood disease that attacks the
nervous system. If you live in an area where Lyme Disease is a risk, be very
cautious and seek sound advice on keeping ticks off you and your furry friends.
5. Offset your pet Maybe Scruffy will only drink water from an
electric-powered water fountain, or perhaps you have a self-cleaning litter box
from before you went green -- we all have corpses buried in our backyards. Why
not purchase green tags, otherwise known as
renewable energy credits, to offset your pets' carbon emissions. Heck, buy 'em
for the whole family so no one feels left out. Or better yet, check if your
state sells green power so you and your furry
compatriots can go carbon neutral.
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