Bonding baby boar with a 3 year old, how soon to adopt for bereaved boar?

4boipigs

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tl;dr - is bonding a baby boar with an adult recommended? Is adopting within days of another pig's death okay?

Sorry if this is rambles a bit. I'm stressed from the unexpected loss.

Yesterday I woke up and my eldest boar had died overnight. His brother (Gimbly) had been in the cage all night with the body, but was acting normally (eating/begging for food) when I went to check on them after I woke up, as I always do. This will be my second experience having to find a new friend for a boar. Gimbly is around 3 yrs old, and extremely gentle. He was so kind to his senior companion (who was much smaller, blind, and in August had eye removal surgery). I want to adopt asap (as soon as today) but I'm afraid it will be difficult to find a boar will not bully Gimbly. I read and watched videos about how bonding young babies to adult boars is easy and a good choice. I understand as the baby reaches its teen phase, it may challenge the other boar and there could be trouble with the bond. Is it true a baby would be a good choice for a bereaved adult boar?

I have 2 options for adopting a new friend...one is the local guinea pig rescue, where Gimbly came from. The bad thing is they're only open Saturdays. I sometimes work Saturdays and my work schedule is varied, so I can't say what days I will get off. If I'm lucky, I could adopt a new brother in 2 weeks. They set aside 3 or 4 hours to do boar bonding with their various boars. Last year, I had to wait a month. In that time, the bereaved pig at that time (who is the boar that passed yesterday) was extremely stressed from the loss of his friend. Gimbly seems fine right now, but I don't want to wait to get a friend.

My other option is to go to the animal shelter. They have many males listed as 'baby' and they will let me do bonding at the shelter. This would likely involve me doing the bonding on my own, since I don't know how well informed the shelter is about guinea pigs. I am very skeptical on how much shelters know about pigs due to a past bad adoption experience. On the positive side, I will be adopting a shelter pig who is in much greater need of a home than a pig who is safe at a dedicated pig rescue.

I'm a little torn on whether to take Gimbly to the vet for a check up. I don't think my boar died of any infectious disease. I only had him a year as he was found abandoned. He was estimated to be 6 or 7 years old. We went to the vet many times for his eye issues which led to his eye removal, so if there was something wrong I trust the vet would have caught it. Physically, I don't see anything wrong with Gimbly.

I will take the new pig to the vet for a new pet visit if I get it from the shelter. That leads me to conflicts to if I should just pick a baby and quarantine, and then bond on my own, or should I bond at the shelter and keep the two together since Gimbly is alone and it's better to get a friend asap?

If all goes well, I'd really like to adopt a new brother today or tomorrow, however if it's better for us I'll also wait for the rescue.

Could anyone also link me to some good articles on young pig care? I have never had a young pig and am seeing conflicting info online on what to feed.
 
Hello. I’m so sorry for your loss. Such a shock for you. I had a 6 and a half month piggy left alone last November after his friend passed. We got another piggy three days later. We were just heading into another covid lockdown so I couldn’t leave it so I panic bought Pepper. He was only about 5 weeks old. So I didn’t need to quarantine him. I bonded them in my bathroom. It went so well. Pepper just wanted another piggy to follow and Percy was happy to have company again. Once Pepper got to his teenage months he got a little bit grumpy but Percy is so kind and gentle it never caused any issues. I didn’t have to feed Pepper anything special. Hope that helps. Take care. ❤️

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He was tiny 😍
 
I'm so sorry for your loss.

Most piggies will be ok for a few weeks while they grieve and while you get plans in place for finding a new character compatible friend.
You do of course need to keep an eye out for acute pining (refusal to eat etc) but for most piggies they will be absolutely fine.

Looking After A Bereaved Guinea Pig

Babies are usually accepted by older boars. Babies are desperate for companionship and most older boars will take them under their wing. However, as character compatibility is the most important factor, you can never predict how it will go and we do see some failures in bonding adults with babies on the forum. Therefore ensuring you can return a piggy if the bonding does not come off is a good idea.
As the baby becomes a teenager (16 weeks onwards) that things can change between them when the youngster gets his own ideas but it is worth remembering more boar pairs make it together for the long term than not, so have a back up plan as you would with any boar pair, but dont overly worry about that at all.

An important point to note is that baby piggies - those under four months of age - cannot be quarantined at all. They must be bonded with another piggy straight away due to their high needs for social interaction. If the baby was to be carrying anything, then you would have to treat them both.

Bonding and Interaction: Illustrated social behaviours and bonding dynamics

You feed a youngster the exact same diet as an adult - an unlimited hay diet, along with 50g of veg (adding new veggies in slowly so they dont cause digestive issues) and one tablespoon of normal adult pellets.
You do not need to give specific young piggy pellets - and as you have an older piggy in the cage, and young piggy pellets contain alfalfa which isnt recommended for adults anyway
 
So sorry for your loss.
It’s lovely that you are thinking of your piggy’s need while you are still feeling devastated.
Hope you do find a lovely companion soon and don’t forget to look after yourself too.
 
So sorry for your loss, I hope Gimbly finds a new little friend very soon x
 
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