Dogs
Catification – Creating a Feline Friendly Environment
By Julia Williams
You won’t find the word “catification” in any printed dictionary, and it’s even too new to be found in online dictionaries. I’m not positive, but I believe the term was coined by Jackson Galaxy, noted cat behaviorist and star of the popular Animal Planet show,
My Cat From Hell. If you watch that show, you’ve probably heard Jackson tell the clueless humans “you’ve got to catify your house!” Jackson has also had a Catification Column on his website for at least a year, so if he didn’t create the term – and the concept – he’s certainly had a hand in making sure cat owners everywhere are familiar with it.
So what is this catification thing, exactly? “Catification is about creating feline-friendly environments that cater to a cat’s natural instincts to climb, perch, rest, play, and own their space,” says Jackson. To catify your home means to provide adequate places that satisfy your kitty’s natural desires to either be up high if he’s a “tree dweller” or “down low” if he’s a bush dweller.
Jackson’s Catification Column is written by Kate Benjamin of hauspanther.com, an online magazine for design-conscious cat people. It includes lots of terrific examples from cat peeps who have created feline-friendly environments in their own home, like the ultra cool kitty staircase pictured at right.
Although catification might seem to be all about the cat, it actually provides benefits to the human occupants as well. A happy cat is less likely to engage in undesirable behaviors, like making mincemeat out of your couch or carpeting. Which means that
you get to have nicer things in your home and don’t feel the need to apologize to guests for your ratty décor (unless you happen to love ratty décor, wherein you wouldn’t be apologetic anyway.)
The goal of catification, then, is to enhance your cat’s living space with things that please him or her and that you find aesthetically agreeable – or at the very least, not hugely objectionable. Admittedly, if you have a high-brow design scheme, some compromises may need to be made. Not everyone is comfortable with “cat shelves” taking up one whole wall of their living room, but there are plenty of other ways to satisfy your cat’s need to seek higher ground – you just have to find something that works for both kitty and you. That’s a small price to pay for unconditional feline love!
Catification might involve getting some tall cat trees or window perches, installing a climbing wall or some shelves that lead to a catwalk (aka the Cat Superhighway), creating a kitty staircase that leads to their favorite high perch, building an outdoor enclosure (a catio), providing satisfying scratching solutions, and so much more.
For more tips from the experts on how to catify your home, check out the weekly Catification Column on Jackson’s website. Be sure to read the extensive archives – you’ll glean some purrfect DIY ideas that you can “steal” for catifying your own home!
Top photo by Mollye KnoxMiddle photo courtesy of Jackson GalaxyBottom photo by Jennifer C.Read more articles by Julia Williams
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Dogs