I wanted to make a cat cave for my cat. He loves boxes.
Paper bags he’s sort of meh about. Sometimes he wants to explore a paper bag
but then again he will often ignore them. But boxes are his passion. Some would
call boxes his obsession.
So, the cat cave. They look very intriguing if you adopt a cat
perspective. You know, when you look at it you are convinced that the cat will
spend many glorious hours luxuriating in cat cave heaven. I just could not
figure out how to crochet one and have the sides stay upright, to hold the
ceiling off the floor.
There were the wool felted ones that looked quite insanely
elaborate, expensive, and time consuming and even messy. Anyone who owns a cat
knows—if you spent 40 hours making something for your cat you will be lucky if
he enjoys it for an hour.
Yeah. So I wanted something quick and to the point. I
decided to use up leftover yarn. Again, tough to bring myself to go out and
spend a bunch of dough on something I have no idea if he’ll like and use or
not. I bought him a cat bed for Christmas one year and he used it for two weeks
then never again. The following year I gave it away.
It’s a simple, straightforward pattern. Using chunky yarn
and a large crochet hook (J) I chained 4, slip stitch to join and worked 12 sc
in loop. It’s a constantly progressive increase to keep it flat. So, second
round, 2 sc in each sc, third round 2 sc in every other st, fourth round, 2 sc
in every third stitch, then 2 sc in every fourth stitch, and so on until you
have the diameter that you want.
My cat is a large boy. Everyone asks if he’s Maine Coon.
He really looks like he could be but his mom was a petite Siamese stray. A blue
point Siamese. Dad could have been Maine Coon, I guess. He’s 14 pounds of cat
under all that hair.
So, when you get your desired diameter (I worked to 18”)
do a few rows of straight sc without increases. This creates the sides. I did
about 3”. That’s about five rows. You’re pretty much making a crocheted basket
with short sides.
I finished it with the crab stitch (aka reverse sc st)
and he loves his crocheted chunky cat bed. I made it in February this year and
he might go a week or two without using it but he always goes back to it. He
just loves it.
The cat hair means it's a well loved and used cat bed. Yeah, whenever I ran out of one yarn I just started the next, using up as much as I could. The cat does not mind at all.