This is a specific conversation about Cat window perches — giving indoor cats a view — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
A vocal Balinese with not enough to watch — that's a combination that will make itself heard. Window perches are genuinely one of the best things you can do for an indoor cat, and for a breed as mentally active and communicative as a Balinese, a good bird-view position can make a real difference to how settled they are indoors. The key things to get right are suction cup strength, a weight rating that comfortably covers your cat, and placement that actually delivers interesting sightlines — not just a wall or a fence. To point you to the right perch: how much does your Balinese weigh, what type of windows do you have (double-glazed UPVC, older single-pane, etc.), and is this for just the one cat?
She's about 4.5kg, we have standard double-glazed UPVC windows, and yes it's just her. She sits on the windowsill already but there's not much room and she chatters constantly at the birds outside.
inparticular.ai
Perfect — 4.5kg is very manageable for most suction-mounted perches, and UPVC double-glazing is actually ideal for suction cups because the surface is smooth and consistent. The chattering tells you everything: she's visually engaged and wants more of it. What I'd look at is the K&H Pet Products EZ Mount Window Bed. It's a hammock-style perch that mounts directly onto the glass with four heavy-duty suction cups rated well above her weight. The platform is wide enough that she can lie flat and really settle in rather than just balance, which matters for a cat who's going to spend serious time up there. Before I confirm that's the one — whereabouts on the window are you thinking of mounting it? Height makes a big difference for bird sightlines, and I want to make sure the suction placement will work for you.
Probably mid to upper section of the window — we have a garden with a bird feeder quite close to the glass so the viewing angle is good. Would it hold up to her jumping on and off repeatedly?
inparticular.ai
Mid to upper with a feeder close by — honestly that's close to ideal positioning. And yes, the K&H EZ Mount is designed for exactly that kind of repeated impact loading. The suction cups are substantial and the frame distributes force across all four points rather than concentrating it at one side, so a cat jumping straight onto it doesn't stress a single cup. The one thing I'd add: before you trust it fully, mount it and press firmly on each cup individually for a few seconds after fitting — it seats them properly and makes a real difference to how securely they hold on UPVC. The K&H EZ Mount Window Bed is my clear recommendation for your Balinese. It'll give her a stable, comfortable platform right in front of that feeder, which should channel a lot of that vocal energy into very focused chattering at birds rather than at you.
That sounds exactly right. Does it come in different sizes? She's quite long-bodied for a Balinese.
inparticular.ai
It does — the standard size measures around 56cm wide by 30cm deep, which is generally fine for most cats, but K&H also produce a wider version. For a long-bodied Balinese I'd go straight for the larger option so she can stretch out fully rather than curl up by necessity. A cat who can lie flat and look out tends to stay put much longer, and for the kind of sustained bird-watching your cat wants to do, that comfort really matters. Look for the K&H EZ Mount Window Bed Wider — it's the same solid suction cup system, just more room on the platform.
Brilliant, thank you. I'll go for the wider one.
inparticular.ai
Good choice — she's going to love it. Position it so the top of the perch gives her a clear eyeline to the feeder and you'll likely find she's quieter overall because she's actually getting what she needs. Balinese are clever and they communicate loudly when they're under-stimulated, so giving her a proper viewing station with real action outside should make a noticeable difference to her mood indoors. Enjoy the peace — or at least the chattering being directed at birds rather than the furniture.