We bought a small, cheap-ish cat door ($20) from Lowe's. There were a few options. I liked that this door had just a tiny bit of space around the door so it would swing open and closed easier. One of the models at Lowe's had a door that touched at the point where the magnet is placed to keep it closed, and it was harder to push open. I also liked that this one was pretty low-profile. There was another one that had edges that were really thin and bevelled to the door and a lock that could be made to allow the cat 4 different access ways ... but then I decided that simple was better and this one was smaller and would take up less room overall on the door, even though it sticks out from the door a half inch or so.
There was a paper provided that had steps for installing the door. I thought this was really smart: the paper itself is what you trace around to cut the hole. I still measured a bit though. I measured roughly how far below the top of the door the hole would be, so I could make the top of the door line up with the bottom edge of the bevelled panel of the door. I really disliked that all the example pictures at Lowe's had the door cutting right through the panel - that just looks tacky. Luckily, our door was small enough that it could fit below the panel.
Measuring for placement. |
Ready to trace for the hole. See the instructions? |
It is light but you can sort of see my tracing. |
Drilled holes through both sides of door. |
During jigsaw-ing. It made a mess of the paint. |
After jigsaw-ing. |
I tried placing the pieces on to test the cutting and see if Llyr would go through it. He was unsure what to do at first, but knew that he could push on the door. After a while of my lifting the door up and calling to him, he finally went through once with my help. Then I went back to affixing the door.
Another point I should mention is that it worked really well for us to put the door so close to the floor on this side because there is a step on the other side of the door. So, when Llyr is coming in from the garage, the door is at a great height. When he is going out into the garage, the door probably seems low when he first starts to go through, but then he steps on the garage step and can get down. If the garage floor was level with our kitchen/living room floor, my plan to put the door really low and miss the door panel would have made it so that Llyr had to crawl through, which would not have been as ideal.
Door attached, paint removed. |
After repainting. |
Kitty learning to use the door. |
Success! Smart kitty! |
We have the same cat door in our bedroom. Because of the air conditioning we keep that door closed during the summer. Princess Fuzzy Pants can't stand to be away from her people and cries. The jigsaw got a bit away from me so our's doesn't look as good as yours.
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