It was a JOINT effort: Arthritic cat is on top of the world after owners build him a spiral staircase to get over garden fenceHe might have been a little down in the whiskers after arthritis left him unable to get up the garden fence. But this cat is now on top of the world since his owners built him a special spiral staircase to help him get out on the tiles. Now Tom the ginger Tabby will be able to join the rest of his feline friends in style thanks to the contraption, which helps him get up the 8ft fence. When 11-year-old Tom developed the painful condition in his joints, his owner Adrienne Ellery and her boyfriend Gareth Bowen, from Fulham, south-west London, became worried he would not be able to get enough exercise. It was after Gareth, a retired firefighter, watched Tom struggling to jump over the fence he decided to build him the climbing aid. It took him a day to create the stairs using off-cuts of timber to make 12 steps slotted into the strut. The stairs take Tom to the top of the wall, which he walks along to navigate the neighbourhood. Gareth, 54, said: ´I was watching Tom and it was sad to see him struggle with the fence. Some days he could do it but when he came back down he was faced with an 8ft jump and he would land with such a thud that I knew it wasn´t good for his joints, particularly with the arthritis. ´I had some wood left over from building a fence so I started on a staircase. ´I knew Tom was an intelligent cat and would figure out how to use it. Adrienne thought I was mad but I thought I´d give it a go anyway. ´There´s not a huge amount of room so the only solution was to create it in a spiral. ´I studied design and engineering at school and set about to work while Adrienne sat there with a glass of wine wondering if I had finally lost it.´ He added: ´When it was finished Tom didn´t know what to make of it and I was a bit worried that he wouldn´t figure it out. ´But then Adrienne tempted him by putting some food on each step and then Tom couldn´t wait to run up the stairs - it was as if he had used it all his life. ´On the way down he jumps the last few steps as a way of proving to himself that he can still do it. ´It´s great because it means he´s not stuck in the house and can be sociable with the other local cats.´ Family support worker Adrienne said: ´When Gareth told me what he wanted to do I was astonished and thought he was a bit mad. ´But it´s made all the difference to the cat. It means he can get around the neighbourhood and as he´s getting older it´s important for his quality of life. ´Gareth´s done an amazing job.´ http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2039139/Arthritic-cat-world-owners-build-spiral-staircase-garden-fence.html ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Can´t help worrying about the 8ft drop on the other side, and wondering how the cat gets back over the fence? As one person has commented, why didn´t "Gareth" just cut a hole in the bottom of the fence?!!! From the topic: Comments Post a comment in this discussion: 07 Nov 2011 20:34 Just actually looked - nice that they bothered, but a plank instread of all those stairs have done the same thing - how does he get back?. 07 Nov 2011 20:30 The bother of making a spiral staircase!!!! perhaps they wanted to get in the NEWS???. When hobbly hobo frank turned up and because smudge is getting older we have three planks in the garden at different places ... one each end of the shed, one up to their tree perch. Should we be in the news? We also have a "catflap" in the wall so that the cats can use their private loo in the understairs cupboard (accessible by the hole if the bedroom and cupboard doors or shut) lit by a nightlight - I have also 3 security cameras to watch their comings and goings! 26 Sep 2011 13:03 Really funny to read this article as the cat does seem to have coped with the stairs very well. Cats like being high up as it makes them feel safer so a hole in the bottom of the fence would not have been the same. |