Scooter Pie
Teenage Guinea Pig
- Joined
- May 26, 2020
- Messages
- 595
- Reaction score
- 910
- Points
- 495
- Location
- Bethlehem PA, Northeastern USA
Amazing info. I didn't know this!She sure is a beauty. In your shoes I would also be giving her some veggies (as long as her guts are not bloating) as she'll be on these antibiotics for a while and she'd be feeling very depressed without any treat. She can't know it's only for 2 weeks/4 weeks etc - she just knows things have changed! I would keep an eye on the squishy poops but perhaps just accept this is how it has to be for now.
The caecotrophs they produce under normal circumstances are soft, squishy (slightly stinky) slop that they just discretely eat when we aren't looking. In 10 years of piggies I never saw any till my George started to get impaction and is cleared out in the evening... the normal poops are bound together in a big lump with the squishy poops(!) and he will occasionally eat the lot (although he does look quite embarrassed doing it). I wonder whether your soft poops are just the naturally produced caecotrophs but she's not eating them because of the antibiotics - either she's not fancying them because of her appetite being affected or the caecotrophs are changed for now which makes them less nutritious? This might explain the pattern of bouts or normal poops then bouts of squishy because I'm pretty sure I read that caecotrophs tend to be produced more at certain times of the day (was it late pm/evening?) whether this varies from pig to pig and is related to their personal body clock I don't know. It can't be all the time - they're just pooping machines! So - and this is just a suggestion - maybe it's just what would be happening normally but the difference is she's not eating them, she's just leaving them around to frighten you!
The fact that she's excited and wheeking for food is brilliant and a good sign. Is she still in pain when she pees tho?