Guess you didn't have this problem, then...
Earlier, some foofarah about clay-based litters seems to have been resolved as: mainly involving early kittenhood and per ASPCA, Any cat older than that detected eating litter should be taken to a veterinarian, since this behavior often indicates anemia or other dietary deficiencies.
MrroWWWrrr. Dunno the smells you were describing (formerly) whether from odors on shedded fur (?) or some other source. Obviously cats are innately self-grooming (unless ill, mentally or physically). At least the dozen plus I've lived with over the years, even when sniffed through their fur ... have fit that reputation of clean-smelling. And when one is sleeping on your arm, your nose Knows. Even the in/out pair, when picked up and sniffed around neck fur, sometimes seem to have had a slightly-perfumed aroma!--which I cannot explain--but there you are.
(My sniffer is broken or ..maybe needs to sniff 100 more, so I can employ Stats? the 21st Century's substitute for experience.) ;^> There's so too-Much "info" out there now--many suggestions eloquently presented/but bogus--that I conclude that, especially on a diet of only dry food, (all now employing pheromone research to formulate a spray-on attractant that's very effective) ... it's impossible to separate the marketing-BS from any truthiness. (Not only re such horrors as Meloxicam and some other vet-nostrums.)
Luck to your kittehs; it's a crap shoot learning how to keep them healthy: they Never tell or show problems: pure survival-in-wild camouflage. We have to look damn close at eyes, *mouth!, fur condition, gait, mood changes ... and most in our manically distracted kultur ever have or take the t i m e , in-time. Meanwhile Vets charge just like meds-in-Murica taught.
* Squamous cell cancer occurs often, IMGuesstimate: because of the huge/profitable expense of anaesthesia at most vets. And fact that so few ever look closely, when we see one yawn.. for the red-gums that foretell mouth problems (kittens can be trained to let one use a 'finger-toothbrush' periodically.) Mine have all been 'old'; lost Sierra to that, at 16. May your mileage Vary.
Ed: add
Earlier, some foofarah about clay-based litters seems to have been resolved as: mainly involving early kittenhood and per ASPCA, Any cat older than that detected eating litter should be taken to a veterinarian, since this behavior often indicates anemia or other dietary deficiencies.
MrroWWWrrr. Dunno the smells you were describing (formerly) whether from odors on shedded fur (?) or some other source. Obviously cats are innately self-grooming (unless ill, mentally or physically). At least the dozen plus I've lived with over the years, even when sniffed through their fur ... have fit that reputation of clean-smelling. And when one is sleeping on your arm, your nose Knows. Even the in/out pair, when picked up and sniffed around neck fur, sometimes seem to have had a slightly-perfumed aroma!--which I cannot explain--but there you are.
(My sniffer is broken or ..maybe needs to sniff 100 more, so I can employ Stats? the 21st Century's substitute for experience.) ;^> There's so too-Much "info" out there now--many suggestions eloquently presented/but bogus--that I conclude that, especially on a diet of only dry food, (all now employing pheromone research to formulate a spray-on attractant that's very effective) ... it's impossible to separate the marketing-BS from any truthiness. (Not only re such horrors as Meloxicam and some other vet-nostrums.)
Luck to your kittehs; it's a crap shoot learning how to keep them healthy: they Never tell or show problems: pure survival-in-wild camouflage. We have to look damn close at eyes, *mouth!, fur condition, gait, mood changes ... and most in our manically distracted kultur ever have or take the t i m e , in-time. Meanwhile Vets charge just like meds-in-Murica taught.
* Squamous cell cancer occurs often, IMGuesstimate: because of the huge/profitable expense of anaesthesia at most vets. And fact that so few ever look closely, when we see one yawn.. for the red-gums that foretell mouth problems (kittens can be trained to let one use a 'finger-toothbrush' periodically.) Mine have all been 'old'; lost Sierra to that, at 16. May your mileage Vary.
Ed: add