Diary of a Cat Mom

Ep. 64 - Why Your Cat Scratches Your Couch 🐾πŸ’₯

β€’ By Dagmar Gatell β€” Creator & Host of Diary of a Cat Mom β€’ Season 1 β€’ Episode 64

Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.

0:00 | 3:13

Why does your cat ignore the scratching pads you bought and head straight for your sofa instead?

In this episode of Diary of a Cat Mom, I share what happened after I bought a new couch and watched one of my cats prepare to scratch it with complete determination. What looked like destructive behavior turned out to reveal something important about feline instincts, physical needs, and emotional well-being.

Sometimes our cats aren't trying to ruin our furniture. They're simply trying to meet a need the best way they know how.

What You'll Learn in this Cat Podcast Episode

  •  Why cats are naturally drawn to couches and furniture 
  •  The physical benefits cats get from scratching 
  •  How scratching helps cats communicate through scent 
  •  Why some scratching posts fail while others succeed 
  •  How one simple change stopped my cats from scratching the sofa 
  •  How understanding behavior can improve life quality for cats 

Timestamps & Chapters

00:00 – Introduction
 00:18 – The mystery of the new sofa
 00:55 – Watching my cat prepare to scratch
 01:34 – Why scratching pads weren't enough
 01:55 – Finding the right scratching solution
 02:17 – Why cats scratch in the first place
 02:39 – The role of pheromones and scent communication
 02:56 – Understanding the feeling behind the behavior
 03:13 – Closing thoughts

This is where I’ve gathered everything that supports me and my cats:
https://diaryofacatmom.com/cat-care-resources/

About the Diary of a Cat Mom Podcast

Diary of a Cat Mom is a quiet, personal cat podcast created by Dagmar Gatell, sharing real moments, emotions, and experiences from life with cats.

This space is meant for connection, comfort, and companionship. Everything shared comes from lived experience as a cat mom and is not intended as professional veterinary advice. Every cat is unique, and for health concerns, it’s always best to consult your trusted veterinarian.

Most of all, please remember:
 You’re not alone on this journey. We’re learning, loving, and growing together β€” one paw print at a time.

SPEAKER_00

Diary of the cat mum. Today's diary entry where your cat scratches your couch. You're listening to diary. Your cat has scratching pads, a cat tree, maybe even toys everywhere. And still, they go straight for your beautiful sofa. It can feel frustrating, confusing, and honestly a little personal when you just bought something nice and your cat immediately starts clawing it apart. But one day I realized something important as I got a new sofa. Almost immediately the cats approached it for scratching. At first I couldn't understand why they would choose the sofa when they already had scratching pads, but then I watched one of them closely before stopping her. She scratched her whole body upward against the side of the sofa, leaning all her weight into it and prepared to scratch with full power. And suddenly I thought, wow, this feels good to them. It almost looked like she was creating artwork with her whole body. The scratching pad on the floor couldn't give her that same feeling. Was too soft, too flat, too low. She wanted resistance, height strength, the ability to pull her nails downward with full force. So I started searching for something better. And eventually I found a cat tree with really thick, vertical scratching poles wrapped in cord. The moment the cats tried it, everything changed. They climbed up high, stretched fully, scratched downward with power and loved every second of it on I too. And after that, they stopped scratching my sofa. That experience helped me understand that scratching is not simply bad behavior. Like cats scratch because it fulfills physical and emotional needs for them. Scratching helps them stretch their muscles, release energy, maintain their nails, and leave behind species specific scent chemicals called pyramids. Cats process these send signals through special sensory structure called the bulmer or nasal organ, tiny scent processing organ located in their upper frontier. So when the cats scratch, they're not only exercising their body, they are also communicating and creating a space that feels emotionally safe and familiar to them. Sometimes a sofa simply feels better than scratch the options we gave them. So in this case, our cats are not trying to destroy something. They are simply trying to fulfill a need in the best way they know how. And often, when we understand the feeling behind the behavior, we can give them something even better instead. Thank you for being here with me. This is Diary of a Cat Mom. Don't miss the next entry. There's always another little moment, another story, another lesson waiting to be shared. I will talk to you in the next entry. Diary of a cat mom.