A little carpet adhesive, a few staples, a handful of small brackets, and it’s almost complete! Overall, it’s solid as a rock and has enough mass to keep it stable without anchoring it to any walls.

Only things left are a ramp from ground level to the second story across the front and potentially a hammock somewhere(I’m struggling to see where i could put one without compromising some other useful part of the tree).

Thoughts are welcome!

    • FuglyDuck
      link
      English
      5
      edit-2
      5 months ago

      looks solid.

      Kitty approves. now you need a run up near the ceiling, circling the room and into the kitchen, to another tree.

      Also maybe a remote laser turret to get the birbs outside with. more PEW PEW is always appropriate.

      • @sneekee_snek_17OP
        link
        25 months ago

        I’ve wanted to do this so badly, but just haven’t gotten around to doing it. Partially due to not wanting to spend the money for floating shelf hardware, that stuff is unreasonably pricey

        • FuglyDuck
          link
          English
          2
          edit-2
          5 months ago

          it really is, lol.

          it really really is. Another option, if you’re okay with it not being a floating shelf is a pair of keyhole brackets fixed to wooden braces. The braces then are bolted into the shelf board (You could leave them floating if there was no, uh, cat…).

          Then, some glue-down carpet squares for traction. (if they’re up high you won’t see it so get the ugliest cheapest discards you can! I mean, uh… go for that cyberpunk-chiq look. )

          • @sneekee_snek_17OP
            link
            25 months ago

            I think if I did put in a run, it would have to be as unobtrusive as possible, so floating shelves are more or less mandatory.

            But I’m probably not gonna end up actually doing it, so the point is moot

  • dactylotheca
    link
    fedilink
    English
    35 months ago

    That looks great, and your cat clearly likes the perch ❤️

    Maybe it’d like a hangout spot even higher up? I saw a video a while ago where somebody had made a “cat path” high up on their wall with some sort of cylinders maybe 15cm (6") in diameter and max 45cm (18") long wrapped in twine, at maybe 1m (3’) intervals or maybe even a bit more, so that the “path” led to a hangout spot high up in the corner of the room. Of course you’d need to build that in a spot where the occasional falling kitty won’t land on your collection of priceless Ming vases and live land mines, or your 99" 4K OLED TV.

    Wouldn’t even need all that much material. Could maybe use pieces of PVC pipe for the “path”, twine, that hammoc or whatever platform you’d want to have, and then the… uh, what’s the word in English… fasteners? Everything you need to attach all that stuff to the wall.

    • @sneekee_snek_17OP
      link
      25 months ago

      We’ve got some of those on the opposite wall, actually. The cats like them, but shelf-type things are better because we’ve got some fat, declawed cats, so acrobatics aren’t their strong suit

  • @Suck_on_my_Presence
    link
    15 months ago

    What are you using for the posts? 2x4 or 4x4?

    I saw it was from scraps mostly, but how much would you estimate this to cost vs a store bought tree?

    • @sneekee_snek_17OP
      link
      25 months ago

      Untreated 4x4, which I think cost like…$10-$15 maybe? Then carpet adhesive was like $20, some wood screws, and more staples. I’ve probably got $60-$90 in it, but it would be pricier if I didn’t have the brackets already.

      It’s hard to say exactly, but I will say that if you bought everything you needed from, say, home depot, it would be very expensive, probably 2-3× a similarly sized store bought model. But the store bought ones are small for large cats, so your mileage may vary