Boars reunited 2 month ago with no problem just started fighting

OriDgsl

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Hello, I'm a new member (created an account last week ! my first post was about adding another floor to my cavy cage but I guess that'll be delayed now 😥).
Sorry for the very long post, I feel context is very important for my issue, both until now and now...
I have 2 boars: Baptistin born in May 2017 and Sonic born late spring 2018, living in a 2x5 cavy cage. Sonic joined Baptistin in July 2018 a month after Baptistin's little buddy died from kidney damage after having a bacteria attacking all his organs (poor little guy was seriously inbred...), at the time Baptistin was already separated from his buddy because he was always chasing him and the little guy really needed rest. Baptistin was very depressed after he died so we decided to quickly get him a new friend, and though he brighten the second Sonic arrived he was still a bully so we kept them separated. I tried introduction in neutral territory, with no smells. However Sonic has a pretty dominant personality and decided he was the boss even though he was younger and smaller, so they always ended up fighting. I would get them back in the cavy when I was seeing tension building up, first it was only after 5 minutes, then 10, then 15... Eventually we got there, floor time was always peaceful: they ate from the same pile of grass, explored together, slept near each other... I should mention that they never fought once in their summer pen, they graze together peacefully, and that in the separated cavy they always slept stuck to the middle grid to be close to each other.
So late January, after a year of peaceful floor time we decided to give it a try and remove the middle grid during a cleaning. We replaced all the cosies with big tunnels and then later fleece curtains. It went pretty smoothly: a bit of teeth shattering, and some light fights (no more than tufts of hair) that wouldn't last. The second week it was only light teeth shattering, and then everything seemed to settle down: they would sleep next to each other, eat from the same bowl, sometimes a bit of chasing (slow) and teeth shattering (soft). Last week I noticed a small cut on Baptistin lip, but they weren't fighting so I just assumed they had an argument over something, sanitized and that was it. However last night I was woken up 3 times be intense chasing, I got up and refilled their grass bowl. When I arrived everytime they had stopped so it didn't seem so bad, it was dark and I couldn't see, but this morning Baptistin had 3 wounds! A small one on his jaw, one on his back (not a cut, but like so much hair was bit of that the skin went with it 😨) and a cut at a foot (of course I sanitized everything and will do again several times a day). They were each at opposite sides of the cavy shattering for now reason, and Sonic soon begun to angrily chase Baptistin again.
So I set their floor time sheet and gave them plenty of hay and vegetables, at the beginning they ate calmly but after 5min Sonic started chasing Baptistin out of the sheet, and chased him away all across the living room 😢 Now it settle down a bit, Baptistin is eating hay but Sonic is hiding in a hidey which is not like him at all.
I'm wondering how we went in a couple of days from guinea pigs finally happily living together to this 😥
I'm wondering if it might be linked to the lockdown... It's time home but a weird one, I'm worried about my family, I'm worried about my job (I work in a small artisan pastry shop and missing Easter is a catastrophe), and I love my job, some people are probably happy to get paid to stay home instead of going to work but to me it's only getting paid not doing what I like (I do spent my entire days baking and sorting my recipes, but it's not the same of course). The first light wound I notice was in the middle of last week, never once before had Sonic really bitten Baptistin, neither during their floor time for the past year and a half nor during the 2 month they spent together in the cavy cage.
Also I should add that Saturday evening I had horrible news with the death of a puppy from my dog's litter last year, two month ago. The poor little girl was only 9 month old, apparently she caught some kind of brain virus and died in 24 hours. I took care of these puppies for 3 months, fed them, walked them, played with them, and also her owners are people we know who don't live far away so I was seeing her once in a while and was looking forward seeing her again after lockdown is over, only to learn she's been dead for 2 months (I guess since they know how much I loved my puppies they just couldn't bring themself to tell us). Anyway I was devastated and spent the entire evening crying, and even yesterday I was really down and hearbroken knowing I would never see again my sweet little black lion. So I'm wondering if the guinea pig caught up some of my distress and this is how they dealt with it...
Also this morning one hay rack was empty, so I'm wondering if maybe they started fighting over the second one and it escalated because of all the stress around them.
So my question is: what should I do now? 😓
As I finish typing this, they're still on floor time, going from eating calmly next to each other to heavy teeth chattering for no apparent reason. Sonic is still hiding a lot. Baptistin looks pretty scared too. Now they're sleeping on opposite sides of the living room. I'm planning on feeding them everything they love non stop today to try to settle them down. I'm also going to do an early cage cleaning. But I'm wondering if I should put back the grid back right away, or if I give it one more try... The thing is, the worriness about this virus and the lockdown is far from over, and I'm really acting normal but I guess they just feel something is wrong. So I'm wondering if I should just put the grid back for now, and let them together during floor time and in their outside pen on warm days like I did before and wait until the atmosphere is lighter to try to reunite them again. I'm at a loss here, everything was fine a week ago, I actually ordered them split cosies last week because they were always sleeping close to each other, taking turns with one sleeping inside a tunnel and the other one lying against it... If I do separate again, should I wait until this whole crisis is over to try to reunite again? What will the steps be then?
Any advice is welcome 🙏
 
Update: when Baptistin started moving Sonic went right to him, chased him and bit his hair and wouldn't let go! We lifted Sonic and he was holding Baptistin's hair. He let go so we put Sonic back in the cavy and Baptistin back on the floor, so they can both enjoy quiet time until we clean the cavy. We will definitely put the middle grid back for now. But something weird happened: my dogs went to eat Baptistin's poos and sniffle him like they always do, and instead of either completely ignoring them or sniffling them back as usual (Sonic tends to run away whenever something bigger than him approaches, but Baptistin never flinches!) he jumped back and very angrily chattering his teeth at them 😳 They're both behaving completely crazy today. I'm thinking maybe their stress level are still to the roof after the fighting, so it's best to give them both a time out and separate for their peace and mine. Then we'll see how they behave during floor time and in their outside pen, but I don't think I'll try to reunite until the mood is lighter around the house. It can't be a coincidence that during the first week of lockdown I get first a mild cut and then they suddenly hate each other. During their very early floor times a year and a half ago they would sometimes fight but it was only seconds, we just had to say "HEP!" and they would stop, chatter for a few seconds and go back to eating. Very shocking to see Sonic run to Baptistin, grab him and not let go even when lifter, and to see Baptistin chatter at the dogs like this - he loves the dogs and always come and say hello when they come close to the cavy.
Anyway, any advice from someone with a pair of boar who went from to part time good friends (floor time and summer pen) to good friends to worst enemies, and if and how they were able to put them back together would be welcome 😓
 
Sorry to hear this, it is not the mood in the house or anything to do with lockdown. Piggies are not existential creatures they have very basic thought processes.

You are going to need to keep them separate as it is highly likely you will not get them to accept each other now. Consider keeping their cages next to each other. Based on experienceI would not put them together again for risk of deeply serious injury. I am sorry I know this is not what you want to hear.
 
Hi!I’m sorry that you are having a hard time.
I don’t think that your piggies could have picked up on your mood or the lockdown either.
I think you should keep them separate, as they do not seem very happy with the current situation.Putting grids between them is a perfect in between.
Hopefully you and your piggies will feel better soon.
 
I agree. Keep them apart so as not to risk injuries that will require a vet visit especially at this time of non essential travel. Your pig will have reacted the way he did to your dog because having been fighting his fight or flight instincts will be on extra alert
 
I am very sorry! Spring time is the time when the wild ancestor species of our long domesticated guinea pigs (which can breed all year round) did start their annual breeding season. Those instincts are still there. Young adult boars up to 2-3 years can still suffer from sudden hormone spikes.

A fight is very upsetting for your piggies and defence/alert instincts remain roused and on high for a goodly while after - hence a two day separation; that is usually long enough for calming down but not long enough to break a still viable bond. ;)

Please separate for a couple of days and then reintroduce on neutral ground again. have your oven gloves ready in case the bond is broken.
You can find more information and practical tips here:
Bonds In Trouble
" Biting" And What You Can Do (Biting, Tweaking, Nibbling and Nipping)
Bonding and Interaction: Illustrated social behaviours and bonding dynamics
 
stress in the house may effect your interpretation of events and your reaction to the piggies but it is unlikely to cause fights and arguments amongst them. I would split the cage immediately and not try to re-introduce them any time soon, this includes separate floor time and outside time. guinea pigs can cause serious damage to each other in fights and it doesn't take long for things to go horribly wrong if you're not in the room to stop it. Although it is never ideal to have piggies living alone your piggies will be much happier as neighbours where they are not threatened by each others presence. sadly it is common for boars that have previously been best friends to fall out around their teenage months as their hormones take control and re-introducing pigs after this sort of fall out doesn't have a very high success rate.
 
Hello,
First thanks for your answers!
I thought that maybe they picked up our stress because on some guinea pig Facebook groups quite a lot of people have published the past 2 weeks about being woken up by their guinea pig chirping at night for the first time, or their guinea pig chirping very often while it used to be rare. I've heard it only twice in 10 years of piggies: the two times it was late in the evening in a very quiet house with a very sad environment. The first time was in fall 2014, a few weeks after my then partner died... He was also very close to the piggies. I was sitting in the living room grieving so hard I couldn't even cry and then one of my boars started chirping. It lasted a few minutes then stopped and I never heard it again from him. And then in January my husband failed a cooking contest that was very important to him (it may sound like nothing but there was a lot more at stake than just the contest itself 😉) due to a strategy error, when we came back home he was completely devastated and hopeless. The atmosphere was very sad and heavy... He went back to bed, I stayed in the living room a little longer and suddenly heard Baptistin or Sonic chirping (I think it was Sonic though). A lot of people have also reported they tend to hear it when there is an atmosphere of anxiety... So I wonder if maybe they pick some smells we give away when we're stressed or sad, for instance cortisol (since it's shared my most mammals)? Not like they sympathize with us or anything, but if they do sense/smell something...
 
I am very sorry! Spring time is the time when the wild ancestor species of our long domesticated guinea pigs (which can breed all year round) did start their annual breeding season. Those instincts are still there. Young adult boars up to 2-3 years can still suffer from sudden hormone spikes.

A fight is very upsetting for your piggies and defence/alert instincts remain roused and on high for a goodly while after - hence a two day separation; that is usually long enough for calming down but not long enough to break a still viable bond. ;)

Please separate for a couple of days and then reintroduce on neutral ground again. have your oven gloves ready in case the bond is broken.
You can find more information and practical tips here:
Bonds In Trouble
" Biting" And What You Can Do (Biting, Tweaking, Nibbling and Nipping)
Bonding and Interaction: Illustrated social behaviours and bonding dynamics

Thanks, this spring time thing makes a lot of sense! I'll visit the links. I will try a neutral introduction again when I feel they have calmed down. It'll be easy to tell from their behavior in the cavy cage (that was one the reason that made us try to reunite them: they used to bit the central grids and rumble, but they had stopped a while ago and just laid against each other). Of course I'll be ready to intervene, I'll start over and put them back in the cavy whenever the tension builds up... I think I'll introduce them in their outside pen, it's always been the place they get along best.
It doesn't really matter if they have to stay separated in the cavy, but I hope I can get them to have peaceful floor time again! Fingers crossed 🤞
 
Hello, an update about my 2 monsters! 😊

So I let them in the cavy for a little over 2 days, I wanted to give them time together in the garden but the weather was horrible so I gave up the idea and had floor time. I set a very large duvet cover, piles of grass everywhere and a few open hideys.
The first few hours were a little bit tense, but it gave me a better understanding about what's going on: clearly Baptistin is not like himself, he kept coming to Sonic to rumble right in front of him and chatter his teeth at him, he even put a paw on his back several times like he was about to try and mount him... Baptistin has always been the underpiggy of the pair even though he's older - even when Sonic was about 6 months old and Baptistin was 18 months old and much heavier.
So after a while of ignoring him, Sonic got fed up and chased him away from the cover (Baptistin found shelter in the dog carpet lol). This went on for a while but since none of them showed attempt to actual fighting I let them be while closely watching. A few hours later it had improved slightly since Sonic was letting Baptistin back on the cover. Baptistin still came to defy him every once in a while, but instead of chasing him away Sonic just sort of pushed him away and raised his head, and Baptistin would back off a bit. Sonic was very patient.
Then in the evening I felt the tension was building up a little (Baptistin came to Sonic very often, I heard teeth chattering more often), but it was bedtime so I put them back in the cavy. The next day was yesterday, finally sunny so I put them in their garden pen: a few teeth chattering and then they went on eating peacefully. Later I moved them to a different area and Baptistin again rumbled at Sonic who pushed him away and they carried on eating. There was no incident in the entire day.
I should add that when I washed the fleece they were on before the fight I found a lot of boar glue stains that weren't there when I last washed it, and the first day after I separated them I found a ball of boar glue the size of a walnut on Baptistin's side 😳 So the theory about entire boars having surges of hormones at spring seems quite verified! 🔥
Now they're in the garden pen again, today they started eating right away without Baptistin defying Sonic.
So I will let them enjoy floor time and their garden pen together, but won't attempt to reunite them in the cavy until summer (the good thing is, my husbands works in a school so he doesn't work in summer and will be home to watch and catch any fight early if that were to happen). Since we're on lockdown they'll be staying outside all day on nice days, but even after lockdown is over they'll be able to enjoy the garden a lot since I work from 6am to 2pm 🙂
I'll update about how their relationship evolves!
Thank you all!
 
If they’re not to live together in the cage at the moment then please don’t put them together for floor time. Each time you separate then put them together, they have to start the dominance dance again and again. This is stressful for them so not recommended. As you’ve decided to do it in summer you should keep them separate till then.

Out of interest how big is their cage? And was there two of everything in there?
 
Hello,
First thanks for your answers!
I thought that maybe they picked up our stress because on some guinea pig Facebook groups quite a lot of people have published the past 2 weeks about being woken up by their guinea pig chirping at night for the first time, or their guinea pig chirping very often while it used to be rare. I've heard it only twice in 10 years of piggies: the two times it was late in the evening in a very quiet house with a very sad environment. The first time was in fall 2014, a few weeks after my then partner died... He was also very close to the piggies. I was sitting in the living room grieving so hard I couldn't even cry and then one of my boars started chirping. It lasted a few minutes then stopped and I never heard it again from him. And then in January my husband failed a cooking contest that was very important to him (it may sound like nothing but there was a lot more at stake than just the contest itself 😉) due to a strategy error, when we came back home he was completely devastated and hopeless. The atmosphere was very sad and heavy... He went back to bed, I stayed in the living room a little longer and suddenly heard Baptistin or Sonic chirping (I think it was Sonic though). A lot of people have also reported they tend to hear it when there is an atmosphere of anxiety... So I wonder if maybe they pick some smells we give away when we're stressed or sad, for instance cortisol (since it's shared my most mammals)? Not like they sympathize with us or anything, but if they do sense/smell something...
That is very interesting. I am 100% convinced that piggies chirp when they are on high alert. Apart from their sight their senses are better than ours and they will also perceive/interpret things differently to us, so the fact that we often can't identify what has triggered this response is not really relevant. It makes sense to me that at times of great sadness in your house they can sense potential danger.

I am pleased you have found a solution to their living arrangements.
 
If they’re not to live together in the cage at the moment then please don’t put them together for floor time. Each time you separate then put them together, they have to start the dominance dance again and again. This is stressful for them so not recommended. As you’ve decided to do it in summer you should keep them separate till then.

Out of interest how big is their cage? And was there two of everything in there?
Hello, the cage is 2x5 cavy with 2 of everything: open hideys, tunnels, water bottles, hay racks and food bowls. I wish I could make it a 3x5 but the house we bought last fall has a small living room and then we couldn't open the door anymore 😕 They can't be in a different room either because the 2 bedrooms are only 3x3m and already packed, plus they're not heated (house is only heated by a wood stove in the living room).
Actually they have been having floor time and garden time together pretty much since they met: at the time they were both teenagers and always started fighting the second they had grids around them, no matter how large: I tried a 4x5 cavy grid pen on the floor and they started fighting right away. Sonic has a big "trapping" issue and always tries to trap Baptistin... The weird thing is they always got along perfectly if it was just the cover with no grid, even though it's around 2x2m. They also get along in their closed garden pen but I guess they're just too busy eating.
So after a while and several trials I gave up trying to keep them together. I tried separate floor time but they were both unhappy with it: they would hide the entire time and only ate and explored when they were together. So I would put them on the floor with grass and they would start eating right away, exploring and chatting, sometimes competing for an hidey (even open) or a piece of grass but nothing bad. This has been going on for a year with nice and peaceful floor time and garden time, and a split cavy.
But last January I decided to try again and reunited them when I noticed they were growing closer (during floor time they always ate from the same pile of grass, had naps lying against each other... and in the cavy they barely moved away from the middle grids. It went very smoothly until a few days ago when they had these fights (with no apparent reason as there's 2 of everything and nothing new in the cavy).
I haven't seen them do the dominance dance except the first few times a year ago, and of course during their first floor time after the fight. I wonder if it's because it's frequent often that they still 'remember' their positions and don't feel the need to establish them again? I'll pay extra attention anyway. I'll also pay attention to Baptistin and try putting them back together as soon as he stops being so horny 😑 Then I'll do it a Friday, my husband is off on Saturday and Sunday and myself on Monday, so that's 3 days in a row with someone watching and ready to separate if needed
 
Is it Baptistin or Sonic who’s acting ‘horny’? If you’re referring to the chasing and mounting/humping that’s all normal and part of mild dominance behaviour. I think if they keep having these barnies then I’m not sure I would try them together again.

As said, keep them separate at floor time for now, until you try to bond them again.
 
Is it Baptistin or Sonic who’s acting ‘horny’? If you’re referring to the chasing and mounting/humping that’s all normal and part of mild dominance behaviour. I think if they keep having these barnies then I’m not sure I would try them together again.

As said, keep them separate at floor time for now, until you try to bond them again.
Hello, it's Baptistin who's acting horny! The two of them never had any mounting, none of them will accept it. I know Baptistin is the under piggy because he usually accepts to be chased away by Sonic for a spot or a piece of vegetable, the problem is all of sudden he started acting like he's the dominant pig and of course Sonic won't accept it!
They had been having floor time together while separate in the cavy for about a year before I put them together in the cavy (they were always fighting if they had grids around them no matter how big the pen - except in the garden - but I tried separate floor time and none of them enjoyed it, they would just go as close as possible to the cavy and stay there not moving or eating for hours). I know common wisdom is either always separated or always together but it seems it didn't work for them. They would fight in the 2x5 cavy or in the 3x5 pen, I tried a 4x5 pen and it was pretty tense too so I just let them loose in the room and then they got along just fine (after a few month I was able to progressively add the pen back, that was one of the several things that made me try removing the separation). But if they didn't have their buddy during floor time they would just spend all of it unhappy and prostrate 🙁

Anyway, an update for the last 2 days :
I felt they were both very calm in the evening after spending the whole day in their garden pen. They were getting along very well in the garden pen. The first time they were in the garden pen after a fight there was a minute of teeth chattering and chasing but the next day they just started eating right away, and again the next day. In the evening they were very calm and peaceful. So 2 days ago I gave it a try and put remove the separation. There was some chasing, head raising and hidey stealing in the evening but it didn't escalated. I didn't hear any fight at night, I did hear a loud chasing (the cavy lies on wood palate so if they run fast it's pretty loud 😅) but it stopped right away. Yesterday morning I picked grass for them before the ground was dry enough so they could go outside and they ate together, then they went outside and grazed all day. Yesterday evening was pretty quiet, a few head raising but otherwise they just ate their hay and vegetables. This morning when I woke up they were eating hay, and my husband who had been up for an hour told me they had been very quiet all morning. Now they're back outside.
So far so good. I'm not getting my hopes up though, actually I didn't really remove the separation: we just cut the ties on one side and laid it flat against the cavy walls so we can put it back in a second if needed. We're keeping a close eye on them and always giving them huge piles of grass and keeping the hay racks filled and overflowing.
I'll keep updating the post even if they don't fight again 👍
 
Hello, a quick update about my boars (I'm always frustrated when I read a thread and then I don't know how it turned out in the middle and long run 🙂)
So far it's not perfect, but it's pretty good. They're still together in the cavy. In the past 10 days I have evidence of 3 mild fights: one I saw (we clapped hands and they stopped, chattered at each other for a few seconds and then went back to eating), and two where I found a tuft of Baptistin's hair (one in the morning and one after a day outside). I checked him all over and there was no bite. So apparently their fights don't escalate and they stop by themselves which is good news to me (since I'll obviously go back to work eventually!). No fight for a week though, these were in the first days.
They went back to sleeping close to each about half of the time (always one in a hidey and his friend just outside against the hidey walls, they take turns inside lol). The rest of the time each one sleeps in one hidey on opposite sides of the cavy.
It's been raining for the past 2 days so they're on floor time, whenever they spend too long in the cavy they always start to get a little bit louder 😕 We're thinking about how be could extend the 2x5 cavy to a 3x5, we would't be able to fully open the living door then, but hopefully giving them the opportunity to put more space between each other when they feel like it will make me more confortable with leaving them alone when I go back to work. We don't have all the materials (DIY stores are closed now) and it's still under discussion with my husband who thinks it's a waste of time since he wants to build their final outside pen this summer but I think it's worth a try.
I'll keep updating 🙂
 
Do be careful when upgrading and extending cages. Extending a cage constitutes changes a territory and changes in territory often sets off dominance. It should settle down once they have settled into their new space, but if their relationship is on shaky ground, then you would just want to be careful about it - ensuring once increase their cage, put the used bedding back in so that the cage still smells of them.
 
Do be careful when upgrading and extending cages. Extending a cage constitutes changes a territory and changes in territory often sets off dominance. It should settle down once they have settled into their new space, but if their relationship is on shaky ground, then you would just want to be careful about it - ensuring once increase their cage, put the used bedding back in so that the cage still smells of them.
Interesting, it makes a lot of sense, thank you. They're on towels and fleece so it'll be easy to put new towels and put their old fleece on it.
Actually this week I got mixed up in my laundry loads and realized after changing the cavy that I had no more clean hideys, so I put the 'dirty' ones back and changed to clean ones the next day, I wonder if that may be something I should keep doing so there's always something that smells like them 🤔 (Also I aways use non scented and non bio detergent for the fleece since Sonic has allergies, and even after a 60° wash there's still some smell onto it, I actually find it pleasant, like a soft musky smell with hints of honey 🍯😅)
 
Interesting, it makes a lot of sense, thank you. They're on towels and fleece so it'll be easy to put new towels and put their old fleece on it.
Actually this week I got mixed up in my laundry loads and realized after changing the cavy that I had no more clean hideys, so I put the 'dirty' ones back and changed to clean ones the next day, I wonder if that may be something I should keep doing so there's always something that smells like them 🤔 (Also I aways use non scented and non bio detergent for the fleece since Sonic has allergies, and even after a 60° wash there's still some smell onto it, I actually find it pleasant, like a soft musky smell with hints of honey 🍯😅)

Yes, it can be advisable with some boars to always ensure there is some ‘dirty’ bedding left in the cage when you clean them out
 
Hello, nothing new since my last post but I was questioning my cavy set up. Right now I have hideys on opposite sides of the cavy, and hay in the middle. Water bottles are pretty much in between the hay and their beds.
But I see cavy setups where the hay is one one side and hideys at the other, or setups where there is hay on both sides... I'd like some feedback before I try something, in case I try a setup which is know to cause problems, plus I don't want to stress them moving things around in case my current setup is known for causing the less trouble 😅
Thanks!
 
Hello, nothing new since my last post but I was questioning my cavy set up. Right now I have hideys on opposite sides of the cavy, and hay in the middle. Water bottles are pretty much in between the hay and their beds.
But I see cavy setups where the hay is one one side and hideys at the other, or setups where there is hay on both sides... I'd like some feedback before I try something, in case I try a setup which is know to cause problems, plus I don't want to stress them moving things around in case my current setup is known for causing the less trouble 😅
Thanks!

How you set up the cage is entirely up to you/your piggies, but given yours are prone to tension, I would leave things as they are so as to not disrupt territories
 
Ok thanks for the advice. I was thinking about it after reading something saying the hay should be at opposite sides so they can always eat without being in the way of each other. But I read the same thing about sleeping areas so... 😅 Thanks, I'll just let it as it is👍
 
Ok thanks for the advice. I was thinking about it after reading something saying the hay should be at opposite sides so they can always eat without being in the way of each other. But I read the same thing about sleeping areas so... 😅 Thanks, I'll just let it as it is👍

There is no harm in giving two hay piles
 
Hello, just an update to say my piggies are still getting along alright. We're back to work so they're in their cavy until around 3pm, when I come back and put them in their garden pen. As summer gets here, they seem to get back to their old selves, with just the occasional teeth chattering over a piece of food 😋They sleep next to each other most of the time, eat from the same pile of grass even though there's always two... Last week my husband put them in their garden pen and put only one of their hideys in there. When I realized it I expected to find them really nervous, having competed for the only hidey for hours... But instead found them sharing the hidey 🥰 (a first for them!)
Hopefully next year will be better, as Baptistin (the under piggy who suddenly found the dominant piggy very sexy with spring 🙄) will be 4 and probably past his spring hormone surges.
Also I found half cavy grids on amazon so we'll extend it from 2x5 to 2.5x5 in a couple of weeks (actually it's a pack of 17x35cm and 22x35cm grids, so convenient! we'll use two 22x35 grids to extend the cavy, so it'll actually be a little over 2.5x5, and we'll use the extra grids to build a first floor later this year - we don't want to change too many things at once). When we do I will put back their dirty fleece as advised, so the new cavy smells familiar (it seems to really work with the hideys, which I've always been leaving for an extra day since last time).
 
Glad to hear they're doing well! Just make sure the grid holes aren't big enough for them to get their heads stuck.
 
Glad to hear they're doing well! Just make sure the grid holes aren't big enough for them to get their heads stuck.
Hello, I was lucky enough that the grids holes are the exact same size as my cavy grids, by memory 4,5cm 🙂 (my boars are 1250g and 1190g respectively, they really can't fit more than the tip of their muzzles, but I will do have to line it if I use them as sides for a ramp, wouldn't want them to get their feet stuck while playing around...!)
 
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