Teddy&Patchy
Junior Guinea Pig
First time guinea pig owner here and first post on the forum, although I've read a lot of advice already.
We have two 6m old boars (litter brothers). They live in a Pets at Home Bluebell Hideaway, 2 storey hutch, outside. We have put at extra "bedroom" downstairs (wooden slot together box with roof and doorway, also from Pets at Home). There are 2 water bottles (one upstairs, one downstairs) and two bowls for nuggets (one up, one down). We scatter the veg around and put lots of hay in the bedrooms.
Teddy has always been more confident, more difficult to "catch" in the hutch, quicker to come out of the bedroom in the hutch and in the run in the garden (we haven't used this for 2m+ because our grass is very wet and ground boggy - garden currently has a substantial flooded patch from the rain). He has always been more active when held, wandering about and climbing up my daughter.
Patchy has always been quieter, stayed in the bedroom more. When we first got him, he would sit motionless on your knee for half an hour and refuse to eat (Teddy wood tuck into his veg on your knee immediately) - he eats easily now on your knee. He is more skittish and darts into the bedroom more frequently when in the run.
All was well to begin with but we have clearly entered the teenage phase. Over the past six weeks or so, Teddy has become dominant and bullies Patchy. Behaviour such as sitting in front of the bedroom door so Patch cannot leave, chasing Patch out of Teddy's preferred bedroom. Both guineas have displayed increased teeth chattering, yawning, rearing up, rumble strutting etc.
About a month ago, we noticed Patch had a small cut on one of the pads of his front paw. Two days later he had a small chunk of fur missing near his eye. We scrubbed out the hutch (vinyl floor, so urine doesn't soak in anyway), bathed them (first bath; they also seemed very smelly all of a sudden) and bought the second good bowl and water bottle. Things seemed to calm down for a while.
Then it snowed. With hindsight, we made a big mistake here because we brought them both indoors overnight for a week or so of minus temperatures in a small plastic indoor cage. They were in the outdoor hutch during the day but they were cooped up overnight.
This is the standard £35 Pets at Home indoor cage, with bedroom at one end. That wasn't working from the start, so we put the bedroom in the middle and a shoe box in one side, which gave them their own sides. Lots of clacking and a few skirmishes. Teddy claimed the good bedroom; Patch was not allowed in. If Teddy came out to eat, Patch went in (out of the way) only to be chased out when Teddy had finished eating.
We then noticed Patch with a blood shot eye (bleeding eye lid on closer inspection) and following the first full 24 hours back in the outdoor hutch, Patch had a chunk of fur missing and a significant scratch (gouge?) behind his front leg.
At this point (Friday), we took the stairs out, laid a plank over the hole and they have been living separately over Christmas.
We are at a loss what to do. We don't want them to be lonely. We definitely don't want more guinea pigs. Swapping one is not an option as my daughters have one guinea each. I understand that neutering would make no difference. Should we try to reintroduce and hope it was the small indoor cage that was the problem? Should we wait a year until teenage hormones have dropped and then try to reintroduce?
Please help! Sorry for the long post - didn't want to drip feed... I work term-time so we have another good week at home to try things out. Thank you
We have two 6m old boars (litter brothers). They live in a Pets at Home Bluebell Hideaway, 2 storey hutch, outside. We have put at extra "bedroom" downstairs (wooden slot together box with roof and doorway, also from Pets at Home). There are 2 water bottles (one upstairs, one downstairs) and two bowls for nuggets (one up, one down). We scatter the veg around and put lots of hay in the bedrooms.
Teddy has always been more confident, more difficult to "catch" in the hutch, quicker to come out of the bedroom in the hutch and in the run in the garden (we haven't used this for 2m+ because our grass is very wet and ground boggy - garden currently has a substantial flooded patch from the rain). He has always been more active when held, wandering about and climbing up my daughter.
Patchy has always been quieter, stayed in the bedroom more. When we first got him, he would sit motionless on your knee for half an hour and refuse to eat (Teddy wood tuck into his veg on your knee immediately) - he eats easily now on your knee. He is more skittish and darts into the bedroom more frequently when in the run.
All was well to begin with but we have clearly entered the teenage phase. Over the past six weeks or so, Teddy has become dominant and bullies Patchy. Behaviour such as sitting in front of the bedroom door so Patch cannot leave, chasing Patch out of Teddy's preferred bedroom. Both guineas have displayed increased teeth chattering, yawning, rearing up, rumble strutting etc.
About a month ago, we noticed Patch had a small cut on one of the pads of his front paw. Two days later he had a small chunk of fur missing near his eye. We scrubbed out the hutch (vinyl floor, so urine doesn't soak in anyway), bathed them (first bath; they also seemed very smelly all of a sudden) and bought the second good bowl and water bottle. Things seemed to calm down for a while.
Then it snowed. With hindsight, we made a big mistake here because we brought them both indoors overnight for a week or so of minus temperatures in a small plastic indoor cage. They were in the outdoor hutch during the day but they were cooped up overnight.
This is the standard £35 Pets at Home indoor cage, with bedroom at one end. That wasn't working from the start, so we put the bedroom in the middle and a shoe box in one side, which gave them their own sides. Lots of clacking and a few skirmishes. Teddy claimed the good bedroom; Patch was not allowed in. If Teddy came out to eat, Patch went in (out of the way) only to be chased out when Teddy had finished eating.
We then noticed Patch with a blood shot eye (bleeding eye lid on closer inspection) and following the first full 24 hours back in the outdoor hutch, Patch had a chunk of fur missing and a significant scratch (gouge?) behind his front leg.
At this point (Friday), we took the stairs out, laid a plank over the hole and they have been living separately over Christmas.
We are at a loss what to do. We don't want them to be lonely. We definitely don't want more guinea pigs. Swapping one is not an option as my daughters have one guinea each. I understand that neutering would make no difference. Should we try to reintroduce and hope it was the small indoor cage that was the problem? Should we wait a year until teenage hormones have dropped and then try to reintroduce?
Please help! Sorry for the long post - didn't want to drip feed... I work term-time so we have another good week at home to try things out. Thank you