FREE Apartment Search – Find Millions of Apartments and Houses for Rent Today!
spacer spacer
Decorating, Pets
 
« Previous Article
E-mail this Article Email this Article
Next Article »
Print this Article Print this Article

Interior Decorating for Cat Owners

(Rate this article)

Part 1: Protecting your possessions

The first thing a cat owner should know about home décor is to keep it simple. Our feline friends are convinced that they are in charge and will destroy at will. Even a well trained cat will occasionally get overzealous and with an inadvertent sweep of their tail will knock your favorite decoration from its place to a pile on the floor.

This disregard for your possessions, overt or otherwise, requires that you use some strategy when deciding on the placement of various decorative pieces. Any surface that a cat can reach, they will walk on. Therefore low shelves or dressers should not contain any objects that are fragile. Items should be moved towards the middle of a surface, or back against the wall, to prevent them being knocked to the floor. Items that have a broad or sturdy base should replace other more top heavy objects. Decorative accents that can shatter, such as ceramics or stone statues, may have to be replaced by steel or wood.

One way to display fragile items is to move them up. High shelves that are isolated from cat “stepping stones” will be out of dangers way. The same may be true of tall dressers, although unfortunately some cats will take a tall isolated dresser as a personal challenge, which they simply have to climb. Your décor will have to be matched to the personality of your cat.

Mirrors can also provide a problem, as some cats tend to attack their own reflection. If your cat has a problem with this, buying velvet or satin cloth and draping it over the mirror can be a decorative way to solve this.

Plants can be one of the biggest décor problems a cat owner will face. Your pet can chew on leaves, dig in the soil, or urinate in them. Luckily, there are ways both to decorate around these problems as well as to train your cat out of them. For biting and chewing of leaves, a natural spray repellent applied to the plant will cause most cats to avoid it. To stop a cat from rooting in or excreting in your plant you have to realize that the dirt in the pot is reminiscent of the cats litter box. In order to change this, use stones or gravel to fill over the top of the dirt. This will remove the cat’s fascination with the soil, and can be a lovely decorative accent to your plant

Cat grass is a special kind of plant you can grow in your home that is specifically formulated to be safe for felines, and to provide them with certain vitamins they may be lacking. Purchasing this can give your cat an acceptable alternative to messing with your plants. When you see your cat eating the cat grass, reward them lavishly. When you see them going near other plants, pick them up and place them in front of the cat grass. If they eat the offered vegetation, then reward them. In this way you can use positive reinforcement to turn one behavior into another one.

Cats will scratch anything that is made of cloth, including couches, drapes, and pillows. Because of this, you may want to start by spraying natural cat repellent on your more attractive pieces. A plastic couch cover may need to be used for a short time while the cat learns to behave itself. Buying your pet a scratching post and praising it for scratching that instead of your couch is a good way to positively reinforce the negative behavior out of the cat. You will have to carefully monitor their progress and only remove protective coverings from your furniture when you are sure they are safe.

While cats are a hazard to most décor, planning ahead can minimize these problems. Cats are so difficult to train that it is often easier to simply decorate around them. Using common sense, and paying attention, should allow you to develop a setting that compliments your pet owning experience.

 | 1  | 2  | 3 |  »

Post a Comment

 
     


  Comments  
     
 
Lora


The only question I have is, has this author ever actually owned a cat? From the tone of this article, it sounds as if a cat hater has written it and then tries to cover up their obvious disdain of felines at the end with a “they can be great pets” comment. I have a lot of beautiful and breakable things in my apartment. I have a number of plants and I have cloth furniture. I have an uncovered cat box and I have a cat. She doesnt break things, she doesnt dig in my plants, not eat them and she doesnt dictate my house, other than the fur. There are a number of kitty litter options that assist with the smell and a small hand vac works wonders for the litter tracked out by the oblivious kitty. Cat grass is great, because they really enjoy it. Buy a scratching post. And if worst comes worst, a spray bottle and a fly swatter works wonders for a rude feline.

 
Beth


I kinda agree with Lora..ha ha ha.
I would like to add a bit though.
You didn’t mention window coverings. If you have a cat(s) that like to get into your windows BEWARE because they will break the blinds if you have them. I would suggest sticking to curtains.
Oh, i also did find in a magazine kitty litter box coverings..they were wooden and pretty nice but they ran you around $99 bucks.
In closing, in order to have ANY pet you really need to treat them as you would your own family member or as a child and with common sense.

 
Kendra


I agree with Lora’s comments. I use pine litter (it kills the amonia odor in cat urine) and a brand of food that helps diminish the smell of my cat’s droppings. Which helps since I have such a small apartment. With diligent housekeeping and well placed scratching posts my cats are very clean and civil. A firm command is all I need to keep my curious kitties away from areas that have breakable items.

jessica


I have discovered a way to get the litter box and food out of my apartment. I went to the home depot and purchased a clear plastic screen. i put the screen on my blacony. i now have my cats condo on the balcony as well. it is now a safe place for him to go and i love being able to leave the balcony door open and not worry about him falling or jumping off the fourth floor. also the clear screens are great because it does not break any rules with the complex about being uniform since you cant really see it.

Heather


Jessica,
I just wanted to tell you that is the best idea I have ever heard to keep your cat safe, happy and to keep the “kitty’s toilet” outside. My cat loves to go outside, but he’s declawed and couldn’t defend himself if he got into trouble. I am glad to have read your idea and I’m going to try it myself!

Kendra


My husband and I are moving in two months to a two bedroom because we’re expecting. It has a patio and I was curious to see if I could put the litter box outside but still keep my cats with me. They are both ONLY house cats and I’d hate for them to get loose. This is a wonderful idea and I think I’ll convince my husband to try it.

 
 
 
 
JESSICA


I have discovered a way to keep my cat safe on my balcony. If like me, you have a top floor balcony, i suggest going to home depot and getting a clear plastic screen. ( clear b/c most apartment complex like to be uniform.) put up the screen with staples and you can easily let your cat out. i have his litter box and condo on the balcony now along with his food. this gets the smells out of a small apartment and a safe place for your cat to enjoy.

Jessica


Hi Jessica,
I am just wondering about the plastic screen for your balcony. How did you install the plastic screen?
Did you cover the entire balcony?

 
 
linda


my dark-chocolate-brown cat JAG “MacMan
‘ came from south carolina with me by plane. we’ve been living in a motel, but are about to move into an apartment. he has been staying on a friend’s borch all summer in a small dog cage in the day, and his cat carrier at nite, for security. every day our family comes to see him and he’s trained like a dog to walk on a leash, and poop at a certain time. i’m looking foreward to walking him in our new community, and pick up the poop in a bag like i did when i had our dog before she got stolen.

will let you readers know how he’s doing.

 
LT


I have a cat! He is a great cat. I trained him to use the scratching post in the house?

 
Alicia


Actually, I do agree with the article because I’ve owned cats(yes they were spoiled, especially about climbing and knocking things down. You can train a cat to use a scratching post and you can also use soft paws. and the best way to keep a litter box from smelling bad if you clean it every day(take out the mess) and change litter box once or twice a month. Cats own their place.

 
Krista


I have to say that I agree with Lora. This writer seems more cat weary than cat friendly. I have never lived in an apartment withOUT a cat or two. My apartments are always impeccable and I can honestly say that I have broken and destroyed more than my cats have. I disagree with the notion that “cats are difficult to train”… bull! I train all of mine with a water bottle or water pistol :)They stay off of counters, do NOT claw my furniture and none of my cats have ever urinated anywhere except in the box or outside. It doesn’t sound to me like the writer has ever owned a cat.

 
Kendra


I agree. The person who wrote this either has never had a cat or hates them. I have 2 cats&while some things written here are true, most is not. I have a litter carpet under the litter box that traps any loose litter from their paws or scratching. They don’t get into my decorations or scratch anywhere they’re not supposed to. It’s fairly easy to train cats. When they’re doing something you don’t want them to do, spray them with water. They can get a little crazy and run all over the house chasing each other, but the most they’ve knocked down is boxes that I should have moved anyway!

 
inger


ive been a cat lover all my life ive never had a cat destroy my furniture or belongings but maybe thats because i think like a cat does alot of the time i often think cats are easier to live with than anything or anyone else

 
Jenn


Funny, my thought within reading the first paragraph of this article was “Has this person ever owned a cat?” I’ve always had at least one cat, and I’ve never had a problem with them knocking things down; they’re generally quite agile. My current cat is quite fastidious, she has never had an accident in nine years, not one. She doesn’t claw the furniture (a spray bottle helped with this), and she hasn’t attacked a mirror since she was a kitten. This article is kind of strange. But I will be buying some cat grass!

 
Manuela


I have 7 cat’s living in my house and it all depent’s on a cat’s caractor also.Like people some cat’s will distroy your furnitury while other ones will use the scratching pole.Mine are 50/50.I just gave them the furniture.Two cat’s love to dig in my plant’s while 5 stay out of it.All cat’s have different habits.Do what works for you cat’s and how tolorable a person you are.I love my animals and after 20 yeas of having cat’s nothing bothers me anymore.Wouldn’t want to live without them.Have a nice Day.Manuela.

Sandy


I have 14 cats each one is different just like humans. I have some who are very mischievous and some who are mellow. And some who just don’t care about damaging anything. I keep my litter boxes cleaned and my cats loved. This is their house and they let me live here which I love! If you love animals you go with the flow.

 
 
mimi


I’m moving from a 600 sf apt to a 400 & am wary of the lack of space for Kali as she runs from 1 end 2 the other and has several spaces of her own. This will be a huge space loss for her and i’m concerned about her getting fat for lack of exersize. Also have 2 b careful as the door opens outside.Now, on the 3rd fl, when she got out, she didn’t go far, always within 50′ but we will be on the 1st fl leading outside, any ideas?

 
 

  Send Comments  
spacer spacer spacer
 
     
*Name:  
     
*Email:  
     
URL(if any)  
     
Comments
 
500 characters remaining
     
 
 

 

 
spacer

Sponsored Links