Danielle Smith
Teenage Guinea Pig
I know many of our fine members here have herds on the larger side, or multiple small herds. I myself have 9 perma-pigs (a pair, a triple, and a quad) and 2 foster pigs. At the minute everyone is on fleece, but there's a problem... the sheer amount I use the washing machine!
Each week I need to wash 6 2x3.5 liners, 2 2x2 liners, multiple 1x1 pee pads, noodle mats, and bits of vet bed, not to mention the cosies (around 8 each week). When I had two pigs they got a full change out twice a week, but I literally do not have enough drying space to do this with 11 pigs so everyone gets cleaned out once a week. This takes 3 stuffed-full loads in the washing machine, each of which take 2 days to dry if I'm lucky.
Each cage has a large hay tray (2x2 correx; or a regular litter box for the foster pigs), filled with wooden pellets -- some herds pee in these a lot, others mostly pee under their IKEA beds (which I move around so no one spot gets completely saturated). By the end of the week, every cage smells very much of urine (I hoover poops and completely replace hay once a day). Pee pads get saturated in a day or two, I replace them every couple days; I'm in the process of making more but I'm pretty sure we'll eventually end up on 4 loads of pig washing a week.
Can people share their whole-cage cleaning routines please? Do you do it all in one day or do a cage a day? Should I just swap to substrate like Aubiose or wood shavings (but then there's the problem of getting rid of the used shavings)? Any tips to cut down on cage cleans (apart from just carpeting the cage with pee pads
)?
P.S. does anyone dry their liners in the dryer? Aside from shrinkage, I'm worried about getting fur and hay all over my regular clothes (I shake as much off as I can before they are put in the washing machine inside a horse bag, but the liners don't dry in the horse bag when put in the dryer for some reason
); does all the fur and hay just go into the lint trap or does it stick in the drum?
Each week I need to wash 6 2x3.5 liners, 2 2x2 liners, multiple 1x1 pee pads, noodle mats, and bits of vet bed, not to mention the cosies (around 8 each week). When I had two pigs they got a full change out twice a week, but I literally do not have enough drying space to do this with 11 pigs so everyone gets cleaned out once a week. This takes 3 stuffed-full loads in the washing machine, each of which take 2 days to dry if I'm lucky.
Each cage has a large hay tray (2x2 correx; or a regular litter box for the foster pigs), filled with wooden pellets -- some herds pee in these a lot, others mostly pee under their IKEA beds (which I move around so no one spot gets completely saturated). By the end of the week, every cage smells very much of urine (I hoover poops and completely replace hay once a day). Pee pads get saturated in a day or two, I replace them every couple days; I'm in the process of making more but I'm pretty sure we'll eventually end up on 4 loads of pig washing a week.
Can people share their whole-cage cleaning routines please? Do you do it all in one day or do a cage a day? Should I just swap to substrate like Aubiose or wood shavings (but then there's the problem of getting rid of the used shavings)? Any tips to cut down on cage cleans (apart from just carpeting the cage with pee pads

P.S. does anyone dry their liners in the dryer? Aside from shrinkage, I'm worried about getting fur and hay all over my regular clothes (I shake as much off as I can before they are put in the washing machine inside a horse bag, but the liners don't dry in the horse bag when put in the dryer for some reason
