Becca_xo
Junior Guinea Pig
Hi, a long story but hopefully some short points to get through it - I am waiting for a call back from the vet to discuss too, but thought I'd ask the group.
- I had two male piggies Biscoff and Cookie, whom I adopted as a bonded pair at approx 1.5years old. Biscoff was the submissive piggie, with rumble-strutting and a few 'nose-offs' from Cookie, otherwise happy beans.
- Cookie is now a rainbow piggie, and whilst Biscoff seemed to be enjoying his new found freedom I sought out a new buddy. I adopted Pedro and went through the full bonding process over several weeks and integrated them together. (April/May 2024)
- The pair live in a 6x2 C&C cage, with two of everything and a large hay pile. Biscoff remained the submissive piggie, with lots of rumble-strutting from Pedro even now.
- In the last few weeks I have caught them chattering, chasing, and caught Biscoff red-handed with a mouthful of Pedro's fur, or I find it in the cage. No blood drawn, and apart from these spats, living just fine, laying near each other etc.
Fast forward 2 days ago
- Lots of continuous chasing and chattering/squeaking, mainly from Biscoff chasing Pedro. I got them out last night for floor time in a neutral zone with more space to see if they would work it out. I was very cautious not to interfere prematurely. I found Biscoff continuously chasing Pedro around and not letting him rest.
- I didn't feel comfortable having them in the cage together overnight so I put a divider in. Biscoff couldn't have cared less, but I did notice Pedro looking for him and trying to peer over.
- This morning they were squeaking to each other so I thought I would get them out on the floor again and see if there was improvements. There was still 'beef' but no chasing. However I do feel from the behaviour change that Biscoff is trying to challenge Pedro to become the dominant pig.
- After 4 hours on the floor this morning with some squabbles, but no fights, and some laying near each other, I put them into the shared cage again.
No less than 5 minutes and they were in a big whirlwind fight (luckily no blood or injuries other than fur grabbing). I have now separated them and feel that this may need to become permanent. I have a set up that could make a 2x3 C&C cage each. Although, I will need to think about the divide as Pedro does not stop biting at the cage bars if he can see Biscoff.
I estimate that they are both approx 4 years old (neither neutered).
I have found this whole experience very stressful and upsetting, as I had hoped they could keep each other company into old age after losing my little piggie Cookie. I can't understand why they have fallen out after over a year of happy living.
I'd welcome any feedback or advice
- I had two male piggies Biscoff and Cookie, whom I adopted as a bonded pair at approx 1.5years old. Biscoff was the submissive piggie, with rumble-strutting and a few 'nose-offs' from Cookie, otherwise happy beans.
- Cookie is now a rainbow piggie, and whilst Biscoff seemed to be enjoying his new found freedom I sought out a new buddy. I adopted Pedro and went through the full bonding process over several weeks and integrated them together. (April/May 2024)
- The pair live in a 6x2 C&C cage, with two of everything and a large hay pile. Biscoff remained the submissive piggie, with lots of rumble-strutting from Pedro even now.
- In the last few weeks I have caught them chattering, chasing, and caught Biscoff red-handed with a mouthful of Pedro's fur, or I find it in the cage. No blood drawn, and apart from these spats, living just fine, laying near each other etc.
Fast forward 2 days ago
- Lots of continuous chasing and chattering/squeaking, mainly from Biscoff chasing Pedro. I got them out last night for floor time in a neutral zone with more space to see if they would work it out. I was very cautious not to interfere prematurely. I found Biscoff continuously chasing Pedro around and not letting him rest.
- I didn't feel comfortable having them in the cage together overnight so I put a divider in. Biscoff couldn't have cared less, but I did notice Pedro looking for him and trying to peer over.
- This morning they were squeaking to each other so I thought I would get them out on the floor again and see if there was improvements. There was still 'beef' but no chasing. However I do feel from the behaviour change that Biscoff is trying to challenge Pedro to become the dominant pig.
- After 4 hours on the floor this morning with some squabbles, but no fights, and some laying near each other, I put them into the shared cage again.
No less than 5 minutes and they were in a big whirlwind fight (luckily no blood or injuries other than fur grabbing). I have now separated them and feel that this may need to become permanent. I have a set up that could make a 2x3 C&C cage each. Although, I will need to think about the divide as Pedro does not stop biting at the cage bars if he can see Biscoff.
I estimate that they are both approx 4 years old (neither neutered).
I have found this whole experience very stressful and upsetting, as I had hoped they could keep each other company into old age after losing my little piggie Cookie. I can't understand why they have fallen out after over a year of happy living.
I'd welcome any feedback or advice