For the cat owner who reads Jackson Galaxy, cat-proofs rooms for environmental enrichment, and considers vertical space a design requirement.

Puzzle feeders that mimic the hide-and-hunt feeding pattern — five small mice that the owner hides daily and the cat must find and open. The enrichment tool that cat behavior communities and veterinary behaviorists recommend for indoor cats who eat too fast and have low stimulation.
“The one reliable rule of gift-giving: anything that makes them look more serious at what they love will be received with disproportionate gratitude.”

The wand toy with a following in the cat behavior community — the spinning feather at the end mimics real prey flight in a way that flat toys cannot. Interactive wand play satisfies the prey sequence from stalk through capture, which puzzle feeders and automated toys don't fully replicate.

Bird TV: a suction-cup feeder that mounts at cat-eye window level and brings live bird activity within striking distance of the glass. The enrichment that requires no daily intervention and provides hours of predatory arousal through the window.

A behavior-focused book that addresses litter box problems, territorial aggression, and environmental anxiety with the specificity that cat owners actually need — not general pet tips but a framework for reading and modifying feline behavior. The reference that cat enrichment enthusiasts share when someone has a behavioral problem.

Vertical territory is the Jackson Galaxy principle that cat behavior enthusiasts have internalized — cats who own the vertical space in a room are less anxious and less territorial with other cats or visitors. Mountable shelves that create a wall-based cat highway are the enrichment that changes household dynamics.
Friends claim items. No duplicates. No awkward conversations.



