Cat Mazes

Frozen frenzy mania level 81. If you're looking for a way to keep your kitten entertained these rustic cat mazes by Etsy seller Castastrophi Creations are the ideal way to provide your feline friend with hours upon hours of fun. Cats can have fun going through the maze or enjoy lounging on the hammock style levels.These cat mazes are cleverly made from fabric and wall mounted shelving unites.

In this video I show you how to make Giant Cardboard Maze Game for your cat or kittens. It's a fun project for you and your pets. If you like the video, share it, like it and subscribe for more.

Each maze comes with five wooden shelves and several pieces of connecting fabric. The maze is designed to be set up in a rectangular design with one shelf complete with a large hole for your cat to leap through. This way your feline friend can enjoy hanging out above or in-between the maze levels. Buyers can choose what color they'd like their cat maze to come in.

Cats LOVE tunnels, ledges, boxes, and hideaways. The also love perching somewhere higher than their humans so they can rule over their domain. We constructed this maze in our home in Wisconsin but when we sold the house and moved to sunny California, the maze, unfortunately, had to be taken down. While most cat lovers probably don’t have the space or inclination to replicate a maze this size, there may be an idea or two in the Instructable that can be used on a smaller scale. For example, our cats enjoyed the tunnel and the cat condo even when the were sitting down on the floor during fabrication.We used:A 12' long cardboard carpet tube (ask for one at your local carpet store, most are tossed)12' of 1x12 pinescrap carpet10' of 1x2 pine.

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We got the entire idea for this maze when we carpeted our house and the installers left behind a 12' cardboard core for the carpet roll. I drilled “windows” in the tube every 2 ½ feet with a 3' hole saw mounted on a hand drill. The tube is held up with 1x2 wood supports which are screwed to the underside of the beam. The tube is also screwed to the wooden beam with 1' washers to prevent the screwheads from pulling through. A 12' scrap of carpet about 5' wide was curved and glued to the bottom of the tunnel. The cats were afraid to go very far inside the tube when it was just smooth cardboard. The carpet allowed them to “grip” the walking surface so they could feel more secure.

The skyway and ledges are made of 1x12 board and are hung using 1x2 wood supports screwed to the bottom of the beam. The maze starts at the top of an open stairway with a small perch on the outside of the steps (Photos 1 and 2). The cats then cross a “skyway” (Photo 3) which leads to a ledge attached to a large exposed beam. The ledge leads to the opening at the top of the cat condo (Photo 4). From the condo, the cats can either go down the steps attached to the support post or they enter one end of the big tunnel (Photos 5 and 6). At the opposite end of the tunnel there is a 3' platform for the cats to sleep on or to use as a turn around to go back into the tunnel (Photo 7).