Cut a long strip of parchment paper or foil and lay it on the bottom of the pan with
the ends hanging over both sides of the pan.
Not exact matches
Line a deep slice tray with baking paper so that the
sides over hang the edge of the tray slightly (this will make it easy for you to be able to simply pull the slice out at the
end).
Line the pan with plastic wrap, allowing the excess to
hang over the
ends and
sides.
Pull the long
ends up and
over your shoulders so that both
sides are draping
over your shoulders and
hanging down long.
You can throw one
side over your shoulder like a cape and pin it; or belt it poncho - style; or belt it
over the free -
hanging ends in front, under or
over your coat.
If a cat stands near the edge of an undersized tray her or his rear
end is likely to
hang out
over the
side, we know what happens then.
* Not clean enough (scoop daily; change completely and thoroughly wash and rinse the box every few weeks, depending on usage) * Not big enough *
Sides too high (especially for kittens and arthritic older cats) *
Sides too low (cat's rear
ends up
hanging over the edge) * Doesn't like the lid * Prefers a lid * Doesn't like the liner * All boxes lined up in one location * Box in wrong location (too noisy, too much traffic, poor access, insufficient visibility) * Inadequate access to boxes (doors or stairs in the way; e.g., multi-level homes need a box on each floor) * Aversive cleanser used (Pine - Sol, Lysol) * Mechanical box too scary * Access problems (door accidentally closed, access blocked by another cat)