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    Best water fountain for LaPerm cats

    This is a specific conversation about Pet water fountains — worth it for cats especially — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    LaPerm owners often run into exactly this problem — that gorgeous curly coat sheds loose hairs right around the water bowl, and an open fountain just becomes a fur-collection dish. The good news is that enclosed or partially covered fountain designs solve this almost completely, and they're genuinely one of the best investments you can make for a cat's long-term health. Moving water is far more appealing to cats than still water, and better hydration directly lowers the risk of kidney and urinary tract disease, which are the leading causes of serious illness in cats over seven. Before I point you toward something specific — is this just for your LaPerm, and do you have a preference on material? Ceramic tends to be much easier to clean thoroughly than plastic, which matters a lot with a curly-coated cat.
    Yes, just for her. She's five years old. I'm not too fussed about material as long as it's easy to clean and actually keeps the fur out.
    inparticular.ai
    Perfect — then cleanability is the priority and an enclosed or covered design is non-negotiable for you. Can I ask how much counter or floor space you have for it? Some of the better enclosed fountains are a bit taller and narrower, others are wider and lower. Just want to make sure what I suggest actually fits your setup.
    Floor space is fine, I'd put it on the kitchen floor. Size isn't really an issue.
    inparticular.ai
    Great — that opens up the best option for your situation. I'd go with the Pioneer Pet Raindrop Plastic Fountain. I know you said material doesn't matter hugely, but hear me out: the Raindrop has a very distinctive partially enclosed, dome-shaped top that the water flows down from, which means the reservoir itself is almost fully covered. Loose hairs from your LaPerm's coat land on the outer surface rather than getting into the water. It's also straightforward to disassemble and clean — fewer fiddly parts than a lot of competitors — and the flow is gentle enough that cats who are slightly water-shy tend to take to it quickly. It's widely available on Amazon UK, usually under £30, and replacement filters are easy to get. For a five-year-old cat, getting her into a good hydration habit now is exactly the right time to be thinking about this.
    View Pioneer Pet Raindrop Fountain on Amazon
    That sounds good. Will the filter actually catch any fur that does get in?
    inparticular.ai
    Yes — the carbon filter in the Raindrop catches fine debris including hair that makes it past the covered top. It won't last as long if there's regular fur getting in, so I'd plan to replace the filter every three to four weeks rather than the standard six-week guideline. They're inexpensive and sold in multi-packs, so it's not a painful extra cost. Rinsing the outer dome weekly takes about thirty seconds and keeps the bulk of the hair from ever reaching the filter in the first place. For a LaPerm, that little weekly rinse is really all the extra maintenance you need on top of normal fountain cleaning.
    That all makes sense. I'll go with that one. Thanks.
    inparticular.ai
    You're all set — the Pioneer Pet Raindrop is a solid choice for her. One last tip: when you first introduce it, place it near her current water bowl for a few days rather than replacing it immediately. Cats accept new water sources much faster when it's presented as an addition rather than a swap. Good luck with her — LaPerms are wonderful cats and keeping her well-hydrated at five sets her up really well for the years ahead.

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

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