CWPX Birman Cattery

CWPX Birman

A Small, Intentional Birman Cattery Built Around Phoenix

I’m not running a kitten factory. CWPX Birman is a deliberately small program centered around Phoenix the Kweenix,
focused on temperament, structure, and raising kittens who can live as grounded, bonded companions in real homes.

Indoor home environment
CFA registered
Health-tested lines
Low-stress socialization

Program Size

Small, selective litters. Quality and fit matter more than volume.

Focus

Companion homes first, with carefully chosen breeding and show placements.

Location

Oceanside, California — with options for vetted travel and flight nanny support.

How My Placement Process Works

Step 1 — Learn the program. Read this page, the Cattery FAQ, Kitten Care Guide, and Policies.

Step 2 — Apply. Submit a Waitlist / Kitten Application with honest details about your home, schedule, and expectations.

Step 3 — Match. When a litter is on the ground, I review the list and match temperament and goals to the right homes.

Step 4 — Move-in prep. We align on timing, handover, travel, and integration so the kitten arrives into a prepared, grounded space.

Cattery Philosophy — Calm, Structure, and Reality-Based Homes

I breed Birman cats because I live better with them in my life. This isn’t a side hustle or an impulse project —
it’s an extension of how I design systems, spaces, and relationships across everything I do.

I prioritize temperament, body awareness, and environmental stability. I will turn down a placement if I don’t feel
it’s fair to the cat — even if it’s easier to say yes.

Phoenix sets the tone for the program: confident but not frantic, engaged but not clingy, affectionate without
being chaotic. Kittens are raised inside the home with exposure to daily life, gentle handling, and clear boundaries.

Adoption Process — How It Works From First Click to Home Day

Step 1
Explore & Self-Check

Start with this page, the Cattery FAQ, and the
Kitten Care Guide. Make sure a Birman — and this program — fits your reality:
allergies, schedule, financial readiness, and long-term commitment.

Step 2
Submit a Waitlist Application

When you’re ready, complete the Waitlist / Application form with as much detail as
possible. I want to know how you live, who’s in the home, and what you’re actually hoping for in a cat.

Step 3
Review, Questions & Fit

I review applications personally. I may follow up with questions or ask for a call/video chat to
understand what kind of temperament and energy will actually work in your house.

Step 4
Litter Updates & Matching

Once a litter is confirmed and thriving, I update the Available Kittens page.
Matches are made based on temperament, goals (pet/show/breeding where allowed), and home environment.

Step 5
Reservation & Contract

Approved homes place a reservation fee and sign a contract outlining health guarantees, spay/neuter
requirements for pet homes, and expectations on both sides. Details live on the Policies & Health Guarantee page.

Step 6
Go-Home Prep & Handover

Before pickup or travel, we finalize vetting, microchip, and logistics. You’ll receive a care guide and
a clear handover plan so your kitten enters a prepared, grounded space.

Environment, Health, and Daily Life

CWPX kittens are raised indoors with controlled access to stimulation, rest, and interaction. Phoenix and future
queens are not living in wire cages or concrete outbuildings.

Health testing, vaccination schedules, and deworming protocols are aligned with veterinary guidance and updated as
needed. DNA and infectious disease testing details are summarized on the DNA & Health page, with full records
available for serious homes and breeding programs.

I care about clean air, clean surfaces, and clean data. That means litter areas that don’t smell like a barn,
regular sanitation, and honest tracking of health events rather than pretending everything is always perfect.

For specifics on litter brands, food recommendations, and first-week setup, head to the
Kitten Care Guide.

What I Look For in Kitten Homes

I’m not chasing volume, so I can be selective. In general, I’m looking for homes that:

  • Understand that cats are long-term family members, not decor.
  • Have enough structure to keep a cat safe (windows, balconies, toxic plants, etc.).
  • Are willing to maintain regular vet care and quality nutrition.
  • Value temperament and connection as much as coat color.

If that sounds like you, start with the Waitlist and
Available Kittens pages. If it doesn’t, that’s okay — it just means this
cattery might not be your match.

Next Steps & Key Links

Bookmark these pages if you’re serious about a CWPX Birman kitten: