>I have a 40# bag for $4.00 labeled Wood Stove Fuel pellets. They are >1-1/1 2 inches long and hard pressed. They disintegrate w/urine. Are >these safe as the regular pellets? Sue: I am pretty sure those are safe. I found only one product, which is what I was referring to before, and it is pretty easy to tell it from "regular" stove pellets. For that matter, I think anything that is actually labeled stove pellets is just fine. Someone else asked me to describe this product in more detail. It was in a mostly-clear plastic bag with a green top. I do not recall the brand name or I would have told everybody already. I thought I still had the bag in my closet but when I looked last night it was not there; I must have thrown it away. It was a while ago that I found it, around 6 months to a year. Regular wood-stove pellets, at least those that I have seen, are hard, dry, pretty smooth, and light-colored, "blonde" as they often say of wood. They also tend to have a more-or-less uniform color, although individual tiny bits might be a bit darker or lighter. They break rather than crumble, and pretty much disintegrate into sawdust mush when wet. Also, the wood-stove pellets with which I am familiar tend to be roughly the same size as the pelletized paper litter I use regularly, maybe a little bigger but I never measured. The ones I am talking about were somewhat darker in color, and had darker brown, almost black specks. In fact, if you have seen the "cracked wood" chips sold as litter, this is about the best way I can describe them: they look like somebody took the cracked wood product and loosely pressed it into pellets. Darker in color than wood-stove pellets, and they are not hard, they easily crumble even when dry. But the chunks they are made from are larger than sawdust, larger than the stuff wood-stove pellets are made from. So they don't turn to mush when wet. But "dry" is relative: they were also resinous and sticky with sap, not dry like the wood-stove pellets. The "pellets" were also larger diameter. About twice the diameter, I would say, of paper litter pellets. And it also smelled very strongly of pine resin. And that's about it. It didn't occur to me that it might be somehow unusual, so I didn't think to make a point of remembering the name or taking any pictures. But if you know what a wood-stove pellet looks like, that ain't it. It's larger, a bit darker with very dark specks, pressed from larger chunks, and more crumbly. [Posted in FML 7409]