A cat owner who examined her security footage during the early hours was left stunned after discovering what her feline companion was up to.
With the entire household sleeping at 3am, Stevia appeared to remain bursting with vitality, racing across the laminate flooring and bounding over a box from one side of the room to the other. In a TikTok clip posted by Stevia's owner, the moggy then seemed to enter predator mode, fixated on something before launching into pursuit following an unsuccessful leap.
The footage concludes with the cat emitting a meow, apparently unsuccessful in capturing her prey. Writing in response, one startled TikTok user questioned: "What the heck were the random floating eyes at the end of the video?"
To which Stevia's owner clarified: "Ambrose [her pet chihuahua] appeared at one point and in the back window were car headlights."
Meanwhile, a second individual joked that their cat, Peaches "performs parkour" at that hour. The video's poster replied: "Hahaha I always hear 'galloping' when she's sprinting across the laminate."
Last year, meanwhile, Stevia's owner disclosed she was compelled to seek veterinary care after noticing the kitten couldn't breathe through her nose and was experiencing a diminished appetite. Fortunately, she recovered and developed into the energetic cat she is today.
According to WebMD, cats have different sleep-wake cycles than other animals, which is why they are often busy at night. "This is usually caused by your cat's natural instinct to hunt and travel at these times," WebMD adds of the nocturnal activity. But there may be other factors that add to excessive nocturnal behavior in cats, including:
There are a number of techniques you can adopt to try and help your pet sleep at night meanwhile.
"The most important part is not to reward nighttime behavior with attention and instead schedule daytime play and feeding with your cat," WebMD notes.
These include: