Paint Kill Cat

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Eric A

New Member
Hearth Supporter
Jan 19, 2010
12
Hi pretty new to the form but need some opinions on paint killing my cat premature? When blocking wood I use a Mingo Marker, and at predetermined intervals it puts a mark of paint. Well after cutting, hauling, splitting, stacking some of the paint is still they yes it is just a spot. The question is, is that little bit of paint going to damage my cat? Do you try to remove it or don't worry about it. What is your opinion?
 
I use downspray marking paint to also buck the logs to correct length. Frequently, a small blue semi circle of paint on each partial split. If your wood is seasoned this will also partially age off. I have a cat that breathes the same air we do. All the smoke/fumes go up the chimney. Cats seem to stay instinctively away from harmful substances. Whether burned or stacked I don't see how it can bother your cat.
 
As long as the cat stays out of the stove it should be ok. I sometimes use a piece of chalk to mark the length I want.

Matt
 
The mass (weight) of the paint is not significant. The stove probably ingests more plastic in the form of airborne dust than this.

I'd ignore it.
 
RonB said:
I use downspray marking paint to also buck the logs to correct length. Frequently, a small blue semi circle of paint on each partial split. If your wood is seasoned this will also partially age off. I have a cat that breathes the same air we do. All the smoke/fumes go up the chimney. Cats seem to stay instinctively away from harmful substances. Whether burned or stacked I don't see how it can bother your cat.

HehHeh . . . I love this answer . . . although I'm still not certain if this made in all seriousness or as deadpan humor.
 
Beetle-Kill said:
Uh, guys- he's burning a BKK. Cat = catalytic combustor methinks.

methinks they all know that..

on a side note.. long story, but KILLZ did in fact kill my cat. :-S
 
Beetle-Kill said:
Uh, guys- he's burning a BKK. Cat = catalytic combustor methinks.

Well, now that changes everything! I stand by my prior statement and think you'll be fine. ;)


Matt
 
RonB - 16 March 2010 10:54 AM

I use downspray marking paint to also buck the logs to correct length. Frequently, a small blue semi circle of paint on each partial split. If your wood is seasoned this will also partially age off. I have a cat that breathes the same air we do. All the smoke/fumes go up the chimney. Cats seem to stay instinctively away from harmful substances. Whether burned or stacked I don’t see how it can bother your cat.

HehHeh . . . I love this answer . . . although I’m still not certain if this made in all seriousness or as deadpan humor.

Sorry all, The fact that Mountain fire was burning a catalytic stove (and hence the question) went right over my head. I was dead serious in my answer. I saw that he was a newbie with a kinda "dumb" question. Laugh is on me and I am cracking up.
 
RonB said:
RonB - 16 March 2010 10:54 AM

I use downspray marking paint to also buck the logs to correct length. Frequently, a small blue semi circle of paint on each partial split. If your wood is seasoned this will also partially age off. I have a cat that breathes the same air we do. All the smoke/fumes go up the chimney. Cats seem to stay instinctively away from harmful substances. Whether burned or stacked I don’t see how it can bother your cat.

HehHeh . . . I love this answer . . . although I’m still not certain if this made in all seriousness or as deadpan humor.

Sorry all, The fact that Mountain fire was burning a catalytic stove (and hence the question) went right over my head. I was dead serious in my answer. I saw that he was a newbie with a kinda "dumb" question. Laugh is on me and I am cracking up.

Glad I read the entire thread prior to posting, thanks Ron for catching the confusion. Pun intended: I say in this case, you could kill two cats with one can...
 
RonB said:
RonB - 16 March 2010 10:54 AM

I use downspray marking paint to also buck the logs to correct length. Frequently, a small blue semi circle of paint on each partial split. If your wood is seasoned this will also partially age off. I have a cat that breathes the same air we do. All the smoke/fumes go up the chimney. Cats seem to stay instinctively away from harmful substances. Whether burned or stacked I don’t see how it can bother your cat.

HehHeh . . . I love this answer . . . although I’m still not certain if this made in all seriousness or as deadpan humor.

Sorry all, The fact that Mountain fire was burning a catalytic stove (and hence the question) went right over my head. I was dead serious in my answer. I saw that he was a newbie with a kinda "dumb" question. Laugh is on me and I am cracking up.

No worries . . . you made my day . . . I must have read your response two or three times and still couldn't figure if you were being serious or were having fun with the "cat" comments. :)
 
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