Amazon has 2oz SmartyKat Organic Catnip on sale for $3.71. Shipping is free with Prime or on $25+ orders.
Thanks to Community Member johnthegrump for sharing this deal.
Chewy has 2oz SmartyKat Organic Catnip on sale for $3.71. Shipping is free on $49+ orders.
Walmart has 2oz SmartyKat Organic Catnip on sale for $3.71. Shipping is free w/ Walmart+ (free trial) or on orders $35+.
Key Features:
100% certified organic, pesticide-free, pure and potent
Resealable canister for easy, hassle-free access.
Help release the natural active ingredient in catnip by lightly squeezing catnip-filled items or by crushing the leaves with your fingers, and sprinkle on your cat's favorite toys and scratchers to spark a round of playful exercise.
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Last Edited by StrawMan86 | Staff
January 22, 2022
at
03:40 AM
Geez, just go buy catnip elsewhere if the word China scares you. Don't touch the phone you are using and flush it down the toilet. Throw the black Friday tv out the window too. Everything from China is loaded with lead and other carcinogens.
Chinese manufacturers will manufacture exactly what they are paid to manufacture.
How many have you worked with. I have supervised production in remote areas near Suzhou, Nanjing, Shenzhen and have also worked with some large factories in Shanghai and across the river in Pudong (at least until they got too expensive). If you don't stay on top of every level of production the German reactive dye you specified (and paid for) will be replaced by some local Chinese dye that runs like an Olympic sprinter— the XL spec you gave the factory will be replaced by a Chinese XL spec that uses much less fabric and is somewhere between a small and a medium— they will farm out production to "sub- factories" that you know nothing about, etc. But in any case food products are not manufactured— they must be grown (not made) and handled in sanitary conditions and processed safely. A fishing jacket that ends up with a Chinese zipper instead of a YKK zipper is not going to make you sick but food is a different matter for you and your pets .
All SmartyKat catnip is made in China, except some 1oz package that specifically state Made in USA on the front. I'm not sure the difference in products, but this particular size does have the sticks and stems. The .5oz packets I ordered from amazon last year were all finely ground catnip without seeds, but I don't remember if it said Made in USA at the time. My cat does respond to that the best. The 1 oz package I've bought at Kroger did say Made in USA but had some stems, though not as much as this bottle.
this is like buying weed on sale. Still get the buzz, but stems and seeds make up most of the weight. You don't want to smoke them anymore than cats wants to lick sharp stems while enjoying their Nip.
Some products grow just fine with little interference from humans, so they are all organic.
Like olives for example, they still slap organic on the label though all similar products are also the same. Maybe catnip don't need insecticide to grow plentiful?
The same people who buy electronics made in China? Why don't you do yourself a favor by finding and tossing all the electronics made in China in your household?
The same people who buy electronics made in China? Why don't you do yourself a favor by finding and tossing all the electronics made in China in your household?
How many have you worked with. I have supervised production in remote areas near Suzhou, Nanjing, Shenzhen and have also worked with some large factories in Shanghai and across the river in Pudong (at least until they got too expensive). If you don't stay on top of every level of production the German reactive dye you specified (and paid for) will be replaced by some local Chinese dye that runs like an Olympic sprinter— the XL spec you gave the factory will be replaced by a Chinese XL spec that uses much less fabric and is somewhere between a small and a medium— they will farm out production to "sub- factories" that you know nothing about, etc. But in any case food products are not manufactured— they must be grown (not made) and handled in sanitary conditions and processed safely. A fishing jacket that ends up with a Chinese zipper instead of a YKK zipper is not going to make you sick but food is a different matter for you and your pets .
How many have you worked with. I have supervised production in remote areas near Suzhou, Nanjing, Shenzhen and have also worked with some large factories in Shanghai and across the river in Pudong (at least until they got too expensive). If you don't stay on top of every level of production the German reactive dye you specified (and paid for) will be replaced by some local Chinese dye that runs like an Olympic sprinter— the XL spec you gave the factory will be replaced by a Chinese XL spec that uses much less fabric and is somewhere between a small and a medium— they will farm out production to "sub- factories" that you know nothing about, etc. But in any case food products are not manufactured— they must be grown (not made) and handled in sanitary conditions and processed safely. A fishing jacket that ends up with a Chinese zipper instead of a YKK zipper is not going to make you sick but food is a different matter for you and your pets .
There is certainly an amount of oversight needed. Chinese mfr culture is to always try to do stuff cheaper and hope the people buying don't notice the change. No doubt that significant oversight is required when sourcing production to china, but that should be on the people outsourcing. People gotta know who they are working with and behave accordingly, not revert to "china R bad" xenophobic crap.
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You know those Chinese inspectors are there doing a good job to protect everyone from improperly made products.
this is like buying weed on sale. Still get the buzz, but stems and seeds make up most of the weight. You don't want to smoke them anymore than cats wants to lick sharp stems while enjoying their Nip.
So is this a "gateway drug" ?!? A couple of months from now will these cats be shooting up heroin in a dirty alley somewhere? 😇
lol just watch out
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Like olives for example, they still slap organic on the label though all similar products are also the same. Maybe catnip don't need insecticide to grow plentiful?
It's called spice for the idiots that smoke it and end up in a permanent trip.. No joke, seeing idiots that do spice is sooo not worth the risk
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