This is a specific conversation about Pet cameras — watching them when you're away — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Supervising a senior dog and a young kitten during feeding times is a really specific — and important — use case, especially when introductions are still ongoing. Pet cameras range from basic motion-activated models to ones with two-way audio and treat dispensers, and the right choice really depends on what you need to do with it. For your situation, I'd lean toward something with a wide-angle view, clear night or low-light quality, and two-way audio so you can intervene verbally if things get tense. Before I point you in a direction — can you tell me a bit about the dog? Breed, how mobile they are, and whether they've shown any food guarding tendencies around the kitten so far?
She's a 12-year-old Labrador, so she's pretty slow and gentle these days. No real aggression, but she does get a bit stressed if the kitten comes near her bowl. The kitten is about 4 months old and very bold — keeps trying to investigate everything.
inparticular.ai
That's a really helpful picture — a calm older Lab with mild resource stress around her bowl, and a fearless kitten who has no idea she's pushing her luck. The main thing you need is a camera that gives you a clear, wide view of the feeding area so you can see both animals at once, ideally from a fixed position. Two-way audio is genuinely useful here — being able to say 'leave it' or call the kitten away without physically entering the room lets you intervene without disrupting the whole dynamic. Do you feed them in the same room, or are you working toward that? And are you watching live, or would you also want motion-triggered recordings to review later?
Same room but opposite corners for now. I'm mostly watching live on my phone while I'm in the next room or upstairs. Recordings would be a bonus but not essential.
inparticular.ai
Perfect — in that case I'd go with the TP-Link Tapo C200. It's a pan-and-tilt camera, which means you can remotely adjust the angle to follow either animal without moving the camera itself — really handy when you're watching a Lab in one corner and a kitten creeping across the room. The live view on the app is responsive and reliable, two-way audio works well for calling pets back, and motion detection is there when you want it. It's also genuinely affordable — around £25–30 on Amazon UK — so you're not overpaying for treat dispensers or features you don't need. One camera positioned at a height that covers both feeding spots should do the job cleanly.
That sounds ideal. Is the night vision any good? The kitchen light is off sometimes when I'm feeding them in the evening.
inparticular.ai
Yes, the Tapo C200's night vision is solid for an indoor camera at this price point — it switches to infrared automatically in low light and gives you a clear enough image to see what both animals are doing. You won't get the colour detail you'd have in daylight, but for spotting whether the kitten is encroaching on the Lab's space or whether your dog looks stressed, it's more than adequate. Just position it so neither animal is directly under a harsh light source that would throw the contrast off. You'll be well covered.
Great, I think that's the one. Thanks.
inparticular.ai
Good luck with the introductions — the fact that your Lab is gentle and you're being this careful about it puts you in a really good position. The Tapo C200 should give you the eyes and voice you need to keep feeding times calm while they both figure out the new arrangement.