Inspired by watching my cat lay on her 6’ (2 m) tall cat tower and sleep like a baby. Zero regrets, even if it makes us look like insane cat people for having a giant cat tower right in our living room. She lives here, she gets furniture too!

  • @Stovetop
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    281 month ago

    A self-cleaning litterbox. Absolutely worth it.

      • @iamdisillusioned
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        111 month ago

        I got the litter robot. I’ve had it 9 months. I have a cat that loves to dig and the rubber liner doesn’t look like it’s going to hold up for more than 2 years because she scratches the same spot relentlessly, but I still love it. I’d buy a new one every other year if I needed to.

          • @iamdisillusioned
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            1 month ago

            Awesome, thanks for sharing! I ordered my free replacement. Glad I got the 3 year warranty.

        • @proudblond
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          31 month ago

          Same here. It’s a very painfully expensive purchase but now that we’ve had one, I’d pull that trigger again in a heartbeat if something happened to this one. I wish it was easier to deep clean but otherwise it is fantastic. We have three cats and empty the bin probably twice a week, still waaaay better than scooping. And the really prissy cat likes her clean litter.

    • @Odelay42
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      31 month ago

      Came here to say:

      • thyroid medication
      • obstruction surgery
      • cancer surgery and treatment
      • cardiology to treat dilated cardiomyopathy.

      Probably cost $25k over the years. I’m extremely grateful our pet insurance covered 80-90% of that.

      Dude just turned 10 and he’s healthy and happy enough to start treating his arthritis.

  • Riskable
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    221 month ago

    Bought an automatic door opener (the type for handicapped people in wheelchairs) so the dogs can come and go as they please to/from the back yard. I setup infrared sensors inside and outside near the dogs level (off to the side outside) and they quickly figured out how to open the door on their own.

    Was like $600 but man was it worth it! Never have to worry about them being locked in or pestering me to go out. My big dog also gets a huge kick out of sneaking up on the pool guy and barking at him (just once!) when he’s not looking 🤣

    • Drusas
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      31 month ago

      My friends’ cats use theirs. I think they started getting them to by luring them with treats.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 month ago

      Our cats use it to beg for treats. Very rarely do I see them on it and not meowing for attention.

  • @[email protected]
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    141 month ago

    An AirTag for my wife’s cat, along with a collar holder. She’s an indoor cat but REALLY wants to get out. We got it after reports of coyotes roaming around and attacking small pets.

    One time she darted out a sliding door window, we tried to track her down. Went all over the house, then outside. Ended up driving all over the neighborhood. Nothing. Turned out the whole time she was hiding under a car, 20ft from where she got out.

    Confidence in the tech is low.

    • @[email protected]
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      91 month ago

      Airtags don’t work that well for tracking cats since it needs other iPhones nearby to send the location.

      • @[email protected]
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        71 month ago

        We were waving iPhones feet away from the tag. It didn’t get picked up so we wandered out to the neighborhood.

        My guess is, to preserve battery, iPhones wake up and scan for nearby AirTags only X seconds at a time (don’t have actual numbers, but guessing somewhere between 30-120 seconds). Whatever AirTag ID they pick up, they send anonymously to the cloud along with location. If the owner has the tag in lost mode and the ID matches, they get notified.

        This means if you’re walking around with your phone and it hasn’t hit the scan window, you could miss the tag. This works in a high-density area like a city center with lots of phones waking up and scanning at different times, but not so much in low density places.

        In that case, a GPS tag with cell modem might work better, but it’s a lot pricier and requires regular charging.

  • LustyArgonianMana
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    1 month ago

    Apparently the squishmallows I got her are an obscene show of wealth, according to my family and her doggy daycare. I got them for like $10 each from Costco. She is a texture gal and always squishes and kneads her toys so I knew she’d love squishmallows. She sleeps with her head pushed onto one every night.

  • @[email protected]
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    121 month ago

    Our bird isn’t with us anymore, but years ago I bought her a special made backpack with mesh windows and some wooden perches inside it so I could take her outside. It was excellent.

    • @[email protected]
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      For the first 80% of your comment, I was definitely picturing a small backpack on the bird, and I was wondering what the purpose of tiny perches would be.

  • FlashMobOfOne
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    101 month ago

    Probably just their grooming every 2-3 months, which has gotten VERY expensive as inflation has made groomers’ lives hell and they’ve had to pass on those costs.

    But, 100% worth it. My pups seem to know how good they look and love strutting around and getting attention from passersby on our walks.

  • @VelvetStorm
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    81 month ago

    Bilateral TPLO surgery on my cat’s back legs. It put my wife and I in debt.

    And 2 litter robots.

    • @[email protected]
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      Bilateral TPLO surgery

      I see that you love your kitty (2 LRs, maybe multiple kitties?) the proper amount and I nod to you in quiet solidarity.

      • @VelvetStorm
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        31 month ago

        2 on the same cat. The vet said she only needed one right now but that the other leg was going to need it in a year or two, and it would be cheaper to do them both at the same time. The post surgery aftercare was rough. We had to keep her locked in a dog cage with a litter box and a small bed for 10 weeks to heal. At the follow-up, the vet said her legs were looking better than she could have hoped for because we actually stuck to the aftercare. Now, the little turd has to be on medication, or her gi flares up, and she throws up several times a day every day.

        Behold the rotisserie chicken herself

  • Shadow
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    81 month ago

    This dog bed: https://bigbarker.com/

    Got it with the waterproof protector and an extra cover so I can wash one at a time easily. Totally worth it, I could sleep on this thing its so comfy.

  • Vanth
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    81 month ago

    Expensive in time and labor, moderately expensive in costs. I built a set of floating shelves that went up around a corner, to a ledge at the top of a big window, and off another way for a cat-only path to the second floor. And it was designed to fit the design of the rest of the room.

    It was a lot for a rental I only lived in for two years, but worth it for how much my cat enjoyed it.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 month ago

    LitterRobot 3 – Died after a year… I am not spending money on repairing it as I think the design is fundamentally flawed (DFI system gets pee and litter in it by design and fails). LitterRobot 4 fixes SOME of the issues but I am not dropping that much money on another robot litter box…

    I loved not having to scoop so regularly and the immediate clean cycle actually made the litter last longer with just a few top ups.

    I have purchased two cat fountains, both died in like 6mo of use even with filters and careful cleaning. Cats loved them and they were purchased because they were not drinking enough… Found out all I needed was a CHEAP larger diameter bowl as their whiskers were touching the edges and that is why they didn’t drink much from other bowls.

    • BigK
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      41 month ago

      I believe they’ve fixed the DFI issue, the new one I got maybe a year ago is a different design, with less components and they appear to be sealed. Hasn’t failed yet, fwiw.

  • @ChonkyOwlbear
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    71 month ago

    4 week board and train program. It cost $4500.

    Our standard poodle is a rescue that was heavily abused by her previous owner. She would get scared and bite. I figured the training would be cheaper than a lawsuit. It’s made a HUGE difference in her behavior.

    • @bitchkat
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      11 month ago

      That’s great to here. I have a 6 year old JRT that was rescued from a puppy mill this past winter. We just found out the hard way she’s super protective of my bed (on vacation with my friend and her 6 year old).

      • @ChonkyOwlbear
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        11 month ago

        Amateur opinion here but it sounds like a form of resource guarding. Our poodle did something similar. She would crawl into bed with whoever went to sleep first and then growl at the second person and try to occupy their sleeping space.

        The dog needs to learn that all resources come from it’s people. If the dog was resource guarding food, you would switch to feeding the dog by hand for a few months to teach this lesson. With the bed, the dog needs to know that it is there at your permission. If it acts aggressive, everyone involved needs to get up and call the dog out of the room, and then lock it out of the bedroom for the night. You could also set a dog bed outside the bedroom and throw treats onto the bed to direct the dog there before shutting it out of the bedroom. Getting to sleep in bed with you becomes a reward for good behavior in the dog’s mind.

    • @Zombiepirate
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      11 month ago

      Poodles are the best dogs. So smart.

        • @ChonkyOwlbear
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          21 month ago

          Definitely. She’s smart enough to play dumb to get what she wants.

  • @[email protected]
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    71 month ago

    This is a little weird, but I wanted to take my cat on a trip to the beach. For some reason I thought she would enjoy seeing the ocean. Maybe in our next life…

  • @[email protected]
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    71 month ago

    Litter Robot. But, if I’m being honest, I bought it for myself.

    I got it on the recommendation of a family member. 9 outta 10 would recommend. It gets stuck once in a great while and doesn’t sort the litter / feces, requiring mild intervention. Game changer because one of our kitties stopped burying (I think because she’s a Maine Coon and was bad at it due to size constraints in the old litter box, despite having the largest available).