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    Scottish Fold kitten scratching solution

    This is a specific conversation about Cat scratching furniture — redirect it properly — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    A 7-month-old Scottish Fold ramping up the scratching week by week — that's completely on schedule, not a problem. Scratching is normal cat behaviour: they're conditioning their claws, stretching their muscles, and marking territory. At this age, kittens are hitting a real growth surge, so the scratching intensity genuinely does escalate for a few months before it settles into their adult pattern. The goal isn't to stop it — it's to give them something better to scratch than your sofa. To point you toward the right post, can you tell me: is your cat scratching vertical surfaces like chair legs or the side of the sofa, horizontal surfaces like carpet or rugs, or both? And what material is taking the most damage — fabric, leather, or wood?
    Mostly vertical — the corner of the sofa and one armchair. Both are fabric. She just goes at the corners with her front paws, really digging in.
    inparticular.ai
    Perfect, that tells me a lot. Corner fabric scratching is very typical for cats who love a good full-body stretch — they're bracing and pulling downward. That means she needs a tall, sturdy vertical post she can really extend into. The risk with a cheap or short post at this age is that she'll outgrow it in a few weeks and go back to the sofa, so you want something with room to grow. What's her current weight roughly, and does she have space for a freestanding post, or would a corner-mounted or flat-to-wall option work better in your home?
    She's about 3.5kg now, probably going to get a bit bigger. We have space — living room has a corner she could use. Budget is flexible, I just want it to actually work.
    inparticular.ai
    At 3.5kg with more growth ahead, and a corner spot available, I'd go straight for the Feandrea cat tree — specifically the PPT710G01 model, which has a 62cm tall main sisal scratching post alongside platforms and a perch. It's built solidly enough that it won't wobble when she really digs in, which matters a lot because cats abandon unstable posts fast. Sisal is exactly the right texture for a fabric-sofa scratcher — it gives good resistance and satisfies that digging-in urge. The height will work for her now and when she's fully grown. Place it right in that corner she already likes, and put her front paws on it a couple of times to introduce the scent — Scottish Folds can be a bit deliberate about new things, but once she's used it once, she'll keep going back. The sofa corners are the competition, so if you can temporarily cover those with double-sided tape for a week or two, you'll accelerate the switch considerably.
    View FEANDREA Cat Tree Multi-Level on Amazon
    That makes sense. Will she grow out of this intensity, or is this just how she'll be?
    inparticular.ai
    The intensity will ease off once she's past about 9 to 10 months — you're in the peak window right now. Adult cats still scratch regularly, but it becomes more routine and less frantic. What you're seeing now is partly claw growth speed, partly hormones if she's not yet spayed, and partly that kittens just have more energy to throw at everything. Once she settles into adulthood, the Feandrea will shift from being a scratching post she attacks to one she uses for stretching and scent marking. It won't become redundant — it just becomes part of her daily routine rather than an obsession. You're actually doing exactly the right thing by sorting the redirect now, before the habit to the sofa gets fully locked in.
    Great, that's reassuring. I'll get the Feandrea and try the tape trick on the sofa corners.
    inparticular.ai
    That combination should work well. Give it about two weeks — the tape makes the sofa less satisfying at the same moment the new post is becoming familiar, and that timing is what makes the redirect stick. Scottish Folds tend to be quite methodical once they've adopted something as theirs, so once the post is hers, it stays hers. Good luck with her.

    Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.

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