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
An Egyptian Mau at two years old is basically a missile in a fur coat — they're the fastest domestic cat breed and they need a tree that can genuinely challenge them. Before I get specific: the most important things in any cat tree are stability and height. A tree that wobbles when a cat launches off it gets abandoned fast, and cats feel safest when they can get up high. Cheap trees fail on both counts. To point you to the right one — how much floor space can you give it, and does your Mau share the home with any other cats?
She's the only cat. I've got a corner spot that's roughly 60cm x 60cm, maybe a bit more. She's medium-sized, about 4kg, and honestly she never stops moving. She'll sprint across the room, leap to the top shelf in one go, and then back down and up again. I want something with multiple routes so she's not just going up and down the same way every time.
inparticular.ai
That corner spot is actually ideal — corner-base trees are the most stable configuration because the base spreads the load in two directions. And multiple routes is exactly the right instinct for a Mau. What you want is a tree with platforms staggered at different heights and angles, not just a straight ladder. Do you have a ceiling height to work with, or any restrictions on how tall it can go?
Ceilings are standard, about 2.4 metres. No real height restrictions.
inparticular.ai
Perfect. Go with the Feandrea 67-inch cat tree — it's sold by Songmics on Amazon UK and is consistently one of the best-built trees at this price point. Here's why it suits your Mau specifically: it stands 170cm tall with a wide, heavily weighted corner base that doesn't shift even when a cat hits it at speed. It has nine platforms at varied heights and offsets, two perches, a condo box, and two dangling toys — critically, the platforms aren't in a straight vertical line, so she'll naturally find different routes up and down. The sisal posts are thick and properly secured, so they don't flex mid-climb. For a single 4kg cat who treats her environment like an obstacle course, this gives her genuine complexity without you needing a tree that takes up half the room. It's around £90–100, which is the right level to get solid construction — below that, the bases and joints start to compromise.
That sounds good. Is there anything I should watch for when it arrives, assembly-wise?
inparticular.ai
Yes — one thing matters more than anything else: don't rush the base. The stability of the whole tree depends on the bottom bolts being fully tightened before you add any upper sections. Feandrea's instructions are clear but people skip ahead. Tighten every joint as you go rather than assembling loosely and tightening at the end. Once it's up, give it a firm shove before you let her near it — if it rocks at all, find which joint is loose and fix it. After that, it'll be solid. Egyptian Maus tend to test structures immediately and thoroughly, so you want it right before she gets her first run at it.
Great, that's really helpful. I'll order it today.