Catnip & Silvervine Chew

Regular price $34.99 Sale price$48.00
EMPTY DOM REMOVE PROTECTOR
EMPTY DOM REMOVE PROTECTOR

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EMPTY DOM REMOVE PROTECTOR

Indoor cats need to chew more than they get to

The lamp cord, the leather couch arm, and the corner of the rug all get more attention than any toy in the bin.

The instinct to chew is built into the cat the same way the instinct to hunt is, and a clean home rarely offers anything that fits the bill.

The hidden cost is the dental tartar that builds up from a diet that never has to be worked through.

Most chew toys ignore what cats actually want

Plastic teething toys made for dogs do nothing for a cat's lighter jaw, and rubbery chewies fail the most important test, smell.

Without catnip or silvervine to draw the cat in, the toy sits in the corner while the cords keep losing the war.

The catnip and silvervine chew solves the smell problem first, then layers in the texture and the dental benefit underneath.

A fish-bone shape with three jobs

The catnip head pulls the cat in within a sniff, the silvervine sticks deliver the satisfying crunch that the back teeth want, and the gall fruit tail keeps the play session going past the catnip rush.

The wood polishes plaque off the teeth on the way through, and the natural materials are safe to break down small over time.

Most cats return to it daily on their own.

Questions? We got answers.

Materials

  • Pressed organic catnip head
  • Silvervine wood sticks for the spine
  • Pressed organic gall fruit tail
  • No plastic, glue, dye, or synthetic fillers

Size

  • Roughly the length of a small dinner fork
  • Light enough to carry in the mouth and bat around
  • Sized for indoor cats of every breed
  • Sold as a single chew per pack

Care

  • Store in a sealed bag to keep the catnip scent fresh
  • Keep out of direct sun and humidity
  • Replace when the silvervine sticks split into small fragments
  • Most cats finish one chew over four to eight weeks of use

The pressed catnip head is the most concentrated form on the market, and the silvervine layer covers the small percentage of cats that do not respond to catnip alone. Between the two, very few cats walk away from this chew.

Yes. Silvervine wood has been used for centuries by cat owners in Asia and is non-toxic when the cat chews and ingests small splinters. The wood breaks down naturally if any small pieces are swallowed.

About four to eight weeks for an average chewer, longer for a casual nibbler. Heavy chewers may finish one in two to three weeks, which is still well below the cost of one furniture repair.

Yes, though many cats develop a possessive habit around catnip toys. A second chew per cat usually keeps the peace and prevents the standoff at the toy bin.