Mittens Reviews a Cat Product. Tucker Supervises.

By Tucker — Paws Made Simple  ·  February 24, 2026  ·  Paws Made Simple
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The short version

We gave Mittens a dedicated product evaluation. Tucker could not help himself. The results were informative. See full review →

We've been featuring Mittens as a secondary evaluator since November, but this was the first time we ran a formal evaluation with Mittens as the primary subject. We selected a Da Bird feather wand — the feather-on-a-string toy that has strong reviews in the cat product category.

Tucker was informed this was a cat product evaluation. He was asked to observe only.

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He observed for eleven seconds before repositioning himself six feet closer to the evaluation area. We allowed this because he did not interfere and because Tucker's presence during Mittens's evaluations has proven to be a useful calibration check.

Mittens's Evaluation

Mittens approached the Da Bird at minute three of its introduction. Not immediately — Mittens processes new objects with a deliberation that is either sophisticated or theatrical, and we've stopped trying to distinguish between the two.

Her engagement with the feather wand was immediate and sustained once initiated. She tracked the feather with complete focus, batted at it with both paws, and at one point made a vertical leap that we estimated at eighteen inches. This is her highest recorded athletic output during a product evaluation.

After twelve minutes of active engagement, she walked away. She returned four times over the following hour for sessions of two to five minutes each. Total engagement time: approximately 30 minutes. This is extraordinarily high for Mittens, who typically engages products for under five minutes before reassessing their worth.

On day three, Mittens sat on the feather wand. This is her highest rating. We recorded it as a five out of five.

Tucker's Role

Tucker watched the entire initial evaluation from his repositioned vantage point. He did not chase the feather, did not engage with Mittens, and did not attempt to access the product. He watched with what appeared to be focused professional interest.

At minute eight, when Mittens made her vertical leap, Tucker stood up briefly and then sat back down. We have two interpretations of this response: (1) reflexive predatory response to fast-moving feather, suppressed; or (2) genuine appreciation for Mittens's technique. We prefer interpretation (2). Tucker probably prefers we not speculate.

He gave the Da Bird a one out of five because it is a cat toy and not applicable to his evaluation criteria. This is correct. He noted it was "outside his domain of expertise" — we are anthropomorphizing, but this is what his expression communicated.

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