A Cat-Resistant Christmas Tree Stand

Leia and the Cat-Resistant Christmas Tree Stand

The final piece of the cat-resistant Christmas tree stand arrived!

Lights, camera, action — a tree that stays standing, even with 3 cats on it.

In case my pet posts or Instagram wasn’t an indicator, I have 5 cats. Yeah, I might be the Crazy Cat Lady, but they’re a joy to have around.

Alas, cats and Christmas Trees don’t always get along. With 3 kittens, I sincerely doubted I’d be able to have one this year.

However, last weekend, I had a thought: Christmas tree stands are light. Patio umbrella stands are heavy. They usually start at 20 lbs (9 kg) and go up from there. Lowes had just two left: one plastic you fill with sand and this white one.

I opted for the white one. It’s 20 lbs (9 kg) and a combination of cast iron, concrete, and resin.

The stand held beautifully the past week. At one point, Leo was halfway up the tree with the Princess Kittens in hot pursuit.

The only problem was that it’s 2 inches (5 cm) in diameter and the Christmas tree is only 1 inch (2.5 cm). It didn’t tip, but it still wobbled and shook really bad if a cat climbed it. Hard enough to shake all the ornaments off. (I hadn’t put any ornaments on yet.) I sorted through the plumbing sections for a reducer or adapter. No dice.

Then I found an Olympic barbell/dumbbell adapter on Amazon. It’s meant to convert a 1 inch (2.5 cm) barbell to an Olympic regulation 2 inches (5 cm) diameter.

All the measurements lined up, I decided to give it a shot. I selected one that was powder-coated steel. (Every little bit of weight helps.)

It fits perfectly! It slips almost entirely inside the patio umbrella stand. I haven’t tightened the bolts down yet, so it does rotate. However: No more wiggle!

My Christmas Tree lit and ready for ornaments
My Christmas Tree lit and ready for ornaments

 

Master Bedroom: Decor Update

I was bored last night, so I got around to hanging the gallery wall over my bed. I did miscalculate how much vertical space I had to work with, so the last two pieces wound up shuffled a bit.

I used a laser level, painters tape, and chalk to maintain lines and spacing.

Most of these are from Society6, but a few are from Redbubble and AllModern. [Sources]

I still need to hire someone to help me with the weird sandpaper texture on the walls and the popcorn ceilings. The previous owners used some kind of paint/mud/sand-texture stuff to cover old wallpaper. I can barely make a dent in it. A large strip of old wallpaper border came down when I hung my curtains.

Photos of my process

Laying out my gallery wall on the floor to determine proper spacing.
Hanging my art, I realized I miscalculated the vertical space I had to work with.
Another shot of my gallery wall, completed. (at least for now!)
Another shot of my gallery wall, completed. (at least for now!)