Amanda,
I still use the chlorophyll liquid in their water. I'm using about a half-teaspoon to an 8 oz standard water bottle. I still notice it helps. If I go a week without using it, I can tell a difference in the odor of the polebarn. Whereas if its in use, all I really smell is bedding smell. And I really notice it when I use it in my ferret's water.
My only real complaint about it is that it stains the plastic green after a time. And you never really can get those water bottles completely cleaned out it seems.
Ferrets have notoriously smelly urine and feces. So products are made for simply that, waste odor removal. The Marshall Ferret Bi-Odor product works great on ferrets, cats, and rats...but the price is oh-so expensive. It's $14 at Petsmart for a little 8oz bottle of it. So if you can find it in the gallon jugs it'd be more of a bargain I'd think. But I can really attest to it working. My ferret has a 32oz water bottle, and I'd use 7 pumps per fill-up. It gives directions on the bottle, but did mention you can use more or less depending on the smell level. So in my rat water bottle I'd use 2-3 pumps.
You can find it here:
TheFerretStore.com: Odor Products
Quote:
Bi-Odor? contains a patented blend of amino acids and enzymes derived from mushrooms that work to reduce the ammonia and urea nitrogen levels in the blood. Simply adding a few drops to ferret?s food or water daily will deodorize their stool, urine and body odors internally! Made with 100% natural ingredients and veterinary tested and approved. It is safe and effective.
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I would recommend maybe trying both products and see how you like it. It'd be very hard for me to get rid of my mice. I like raising them just to see the cute color and pattern combinations come out. If I had a market for fancy pet mice, I'd be in business. But the only pet store I know of with live rodents won't buy from other people because they have a contract with a rodent breeder in the area (same person I got my stock from). And he only supplies them with white feeder mice, so what that has to do with fancy pet mice is beyond me. I guess they get free mice that someone gave them, and pawn them off as fancy pet mice for $3 a mouse. Quite a markup I'd imagine.
I tried the regular alfalfa pellets in the bedding mix too..but the mice kept eating the pellets instead of their lab blocks. =P