This is a specific conversation about Cat trees — what makes a good one — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
A Pixiebob is a serious cat — broad-chested, heavy-boned, and not shy about throwing their weight around. The biggest mistakes people make buying a tree for a cat like this are narrow perches and wobbly bases. A four-year-old Pixiebob in full health can easily hit 7–10 kg, and if a shelf flexes or the whole unit rocks when they land, they'll write it off immediately and never use it again. Stability and height are the two things that matter most in any cat tree, and for a stocky breed like yours, wide shelves are a close third. Before I point you at anything specific — how much floor space can you give it, and does your Pixiebob tend to be a climber or more of a lounge-and-survey type?
He's definitely a climber, he's always trying to get on top of the wardrobe. We've got a decent corner spot probably about 60x60cm. He's around 8kg.
inparticular.ai
Perfect — a corner footprint of 60x60cm is actually ideal because it gives you a wide, stable base without needing a huge floor area. At 8kg, he's solidly in the range where you need to think about platform width and post thickness. Standard budget trees use posts that are maybe 6–7cm in diameter — fine for a 4kg cat, but they'll sway under a heavy Pixiebob mid-jump and that's the end of it. You want thick sisal-wrapped posts, ideally 10cm or more, bolted or plate-mounted to a heavy base. Is he going to be using this solo, or do you have other cats in the house?
Just him, he's the only one.
inparticular.ai
Good — that simplifies things. You don't need multiple feeding levels or separate territories, just one really well-built tree that suits a big active cat. My recommendation is the Feandrea PCT710G — it's a tall, heavy-duty tree with a generous corner footprint, thick 10cm posts, and wide reinforced platforms that are comfortably big enough for a broad Pixiebob to stretch out on. The top perch sits high enough that he'll feel genuinely elevated, not just shelf-height. It's rated for heavy cats, assembles solidly, and the base is heavy enough that it won't shift when he launches off the top. It's consistently available on Amazon UK and sits in a price range where you're paying for build quality rather than aesthetics. For an 8kg climber, it's the right call.
Does it come in different colours? My flat is quite light and modern.
inparticular.ai
Yes — the Feandrea PCT710G comes in a light grey option that reads as clean and fairly neutral rather than the old-fashioned beige you get on cheaper trees. It won't disappear into a scandi interior but it's far less obtrusive than the brown carpet-covered ones. Worth filtering for the grey colourway when you look it up on Amazon UK. The structure is the same across colours, so you're not sacrificing anything on the build side.
That sounds good. How do I make sure he actually uses it rather than ignoring it?
inparticular.ai
Put it somewhere he already wants to be — near a window if you can, or in the room he spends the most time in. Don't tuck it in a corner he never visits and hope he discovers it. For the first week, rub a little of his scent onto the platforms with a soft cloth, and use a wand toy to play around and on the tree so he associates it with good things. With a Pixiebob — a curious, dog-like breed — that usually doesn't take long. The main reason cats abandon trees is wobble, so as long as the Feandrea is assembled correctly and on a level floor, he should take to it fine.